Looking for someone fix up my drawings. You know, i send u the images, you smooth lines, color, and add special effects. When I say color, I don't mean MS. paint. Im talking photo shop or flash even gimp if your good at it. im the sketch guy ur the color guy/gal.
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need somone to prettyfy my comics
Looking for someone fix up my drawings. You know, i send u the images, you smooth lines, color, and add special effects. When I say color, I don't mean MS. paint. Im talking photo shop or flash even gimp if your good at it. im the sketch guy ur the color guy/gal.
Could we see some examples of your work?
I feel the main problem is how you scan your art.
Why are you scanning them in pure black and white? It makes the lineart look like you made it in paint.
scan them in grayscale and add some brightness and contrast and you will get smooth lines instead of the sharp pixelated mess you got now.
To be honest, this intrigues the heck out of me :)well then lets get this on a private quack IM so we can work this out. You say your new to this? Well so am I. newbie + newbie = ownage in my book.
here's what I can do with the sample pic (keep in mind I usually work in black and white so this is all new to me)
If you're interested… I've got some questions, but I'm totally up for it
I feel the main problem is how you scan your art.
Why are you scanning them in pure black and white? It makes the lineart look like you made it in paint.
scan them in grayscale and add some brightness and contrast and you will get smooth lines instead of the sharp pixelated mess you got now.
Well, that's true if you're showing it the same size as you scan it (scan at 72 dpi, post at 72 dpi), but most comic artists do scan linework in black and white with the pixelly edges, just when it gets shrunk down from 300 dpi it looks smoothe. Pick up the DC guide to coloring comics (or at least look at it in the store); the linework is one of the first things they mention in the digital coloring section.
but most comic artists do scan linework in black and white with the pixelly edges, just when it gets shrunk down from 300 dpi it looks smoothe.Those people are fools! FOOLS!! :P
Nah, im sure there are plenty of ways to get good lookin' lineart. People just need to experiment a little more with the scanner settings and use a image editing program to get things to look better.
I feel the main problem is how you scan your art.
Why are you scanning them in pure black and white? It makes the lineart look like you made it in paint.
scan them in grayscale and add some brightness and contrast and you will get smooth lines instead of the sharp pixelated mess you got now.
Yeah, but then you get the paper and scanner dust showing up if you do that. :P If you try to erase the dust, then you will come out with white spots all over the paper because the background isn't pure white.
Yeah, but then you get the paper and scanner dust showing up if you do that. :P If you try to erase the dust, then you will come out with white spots all over the paper because the background isn't pure white.
Hmmm… This is how i scan all my artwork, and ive honestly never had that problem really.
I guess it all depend on what scanner one have or if you got a good image editing program.
Hmmm… This is how i scan all my artwork, and ive honestly never had that problem really.
I guess it all depend on what scanner one have or if you got a good image editing program.
Greyscale does just that. it captures everything in the grey color scale. It may include the tinyest bits of paper and scanner dust and treat it as a greyish tone. Whereas pure Black & White will generally ignore the smaller particles, and you get less specks to worry about which is what Shintouku's original images look like. These are easier to erase, and since the background is already pure white, you won't see the eraser when you erase the black specks.
Hmmm… This is how i scan all my artwork, and ive honestly never had that problem really.
I guess it all depend on what scanner one have or if you got a good image editing program.
Greyscale does just that. it captures everything in the grey color scale. It may include the tinyest bits of paper and scanner dust and treat it as a greyish tone. Whereas pure Black & White will generally ignore the smaller particles, and you get less specks to worry about which is what Shintouku's original images look like. These are easier to erase, and since the background is already pure white, you won't see the eraser when you erase the black specks.
I've always scanned in colour, then used levels. It works for me. There are different ways to get great results, it really depends on how you're going to use your original image (for instance, I have my backgrounds drawn out, but not inked, so I colour them, then use levels to get rid of the pencil lines) and how you want the final result to look. In all honesty, once you size down for your comic, it wont really matter because all the pixalation caused by scanning in B&W or the little dots you sometimes get from eraser marks by scanning in greyscale or colour virtually disappear. Virtually
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