Digital Painting: tips for beginners

holy-quinity:

Heyo! I got asked if I could make a tutorial on digital painting so I’m gonna throw together some advice meant for people who are starting out and want to figure out exactly how this stuff all works. Because it’s hard! What I hope to accomplish here is to make painting more approachable for you.

Firstly, I have put together something like this before, so for archival purposes here it is: http://holy-quinity.tumblr.com/post/89594801811/i-dont-know-how-much-of-this-kind-of-thing-you

For those of you who don’t wanna bother reading that, here are the main points:

1. Learn your program and its tools, from brush properties to layer styles. And I mean learn them. Make a cheatsheet that shows you exactly what each button and scale does, both in isolation and in conjunction with other buttons and scales. Refer to this as much as possible until it is intuitive. The end goal is to know exactly what to do to your brush’s settings to achieve a given effect.

2. It’s perfectly okay to use your sketches, linearts, and other forms of line in your paintings. They can help guide the form and there’s no need to make something fully “lineless”! I never make things “lineless.”

3. Study other people’s art and try to think how they could have possibly achieved the effects they did. You can learn a lot just by observing and mentally recreating the process stroke by stroke—muscle memory is a powerful tool at your disposal. This becomes easier to do once you’ve started doing item 1 above.

OKAY!

So where the heck do you even begin?

What I’m gonna do is try to make digital painting as approachable as possible for someone who’s never really done it. The main idea here is that digital painting is just like real painting. So if you’ve ever done real painting, you already kinda know what’s coming.

I’m gonna assume you know the basics of digital art: you can sketch, line those sketches using layers and opacity changes, and fill the lines with color, maybe even opting to add some shading…and you’ll get something like this:

You know, cell-shaded, or maybe the shading’s blended, but you’ve still obviously a line drawing with color put down on layers beneath the lines.

The next intuitive step is to try going “lineless”…but when you remove the lines you get this:

idk about you but I’m laughing at how stupid this looks

When I was first teaching myself to paint digitally, I didn’t really know how to deal with this. Without lines, the form of the subject vanished or became a mess like the above. Even if I was meticulous and careful about placing down the color such that without the lines layer turned on, the shapes fit together, it didn’t look quite right. There’d be gaps, I wouldn’t know how to incorporate the subject into a background, the contrast wouldn’t be high enough, or it’d just in general look too much like a screenshot from Super Mario 64.

Painting requires a different process than the above. You’ll have to let go of some of your habits and conventions. Such as staying in the lines. Such as fully relying on the lines. Like, I love my lines, I love my sketches—but in painting, they are guides for form, and are not the form itself. So let me go through how I approach a given painting:

My painting process starts with a sketch (here a boring portrait for demonstrative purposes). I make the opacity of the sketch layer something like 30%, and then throw down my base colors on a new layer underneath. I’m not being meticulous about the sketch itself, because again it’s just meant to guide my placement of color. I’m also not meticulous about my placement of the color.

We’re essentially sketching with color. Because ultimately what we want is for the color to take on the form and shapes conveyed by the sketch.

There’s a lot going into this about how to use value, how to shade, how to use color, etc. that I’m kinda skipping over because it takes a lot of time to explain…but there are hundreds of tutorials out there on those topics so please, google around! I found some helpful tuts that way when I was starting out.

Something I find v useful is to keep selecting colors that already exist in your image for shading and hue adjustment. This is why I start with really blendy, low-opacity brushes when throwing down color on top of the background. I can then select colors within there that are a mix of the two.

For instance, I’ll select the color of the lines here:

…and use that to shade:

And maybe I’ll select one of the darker shades around his eye, but not the darkest, to make the shading a smoother gradient…and so on.

What I do in general at this point is go over the shapes and lines of the sketch. Such that I can turn off the sketch layer and see this:

I’m replacing the lines with shading and value. I’ll continue to do this as I keep adding color.

This is all super loose. I am not dedicated to any particular stroke. I just want the colors and shading and light source to be right. I’ll use overlay layers to boost contrast or add a hue.

Here are other examples where I used this process:

I am constantly changing brushes and brush settings as I paint. It really depends on what effect I want where. I am also constantly selecting new colors and applying or blending those in. I don’t believe in having some uniformly applied base color and then shading with only one or two…that’s what I’d do if I was cell-shading like the first drawing I showed you here, but painting should be about messing with color and opacity and blending to make millions of hues!

Good rule of thumb: Hard, opaque brushes for applying color. Soft, dilute brushes for blending colors. Sometimes hard, dilute brushes can make some cool blending effects! I personally prefer harder edges on my shading so that’s a brush I use often.

This is getting a bit long so I’m gonna split it up into multiple parts, but really what I want you to get from this is:

1. learn the tools at your disposal until they are intuitive

2. sketch and line are guides for form, not the form itself

3. rather, hue and value will produce the form

And of course, practice makes perfect!!! Every drawing you make, every painting you make, will bring you one step closer to the artist you want to be, and thus every drawing and every painting, no matter what, is a success.

lesbidar:

NOTE: one type of fold will rarely appear on its own – they interact with each other quite a bit! for example, spiral folds might define the outline of a pant leg, while the interior folds might be zig-zag folds.

i’m trying to re-learn how to draw clothing, so i made this little guide to the most common shapes of folds that appear. hope it helps someone else too!

The way you shade hair is so beautiful! How do you do it?

artsbysmarty:

Omg thank you so much!! Honestly shading the hair is one of my favorite parts of drawing ^^

Here’s a small tutorial:

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1. Start off with your hair line art. I usually draw all my lines with a dull brown color, and this line art layer is set to Multiply. This makes your lines look colored without having to go back and indivually color them ^^

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2. Decided which hair color you want to use. If you are drawing fan art, you can usually pick the colors from a screenshot, but if you’re drawing an original character (or the screenshots aren’t very detailed), then I highly recommend [this post] for different hair color palettes! The one I’m gonna use here is from that list.

How do you use it?

For me, I use the left most color as the base color, and the other two colors are used in shading.

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 3. Fill in the hair with your base color (the leftmost color), on a new layer under your lineart layer. 

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4. Create a new layer over the base hair color, and set it to clipping (this means anything you draw on this layer will only show up on the layer below it). Now, pick the color in the middle and using the Airbrush tool (Big size, low opacity), add some very basic shading. (Its usually a good idea to have your light source established by now.)

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5. On that same layer, use a watercolor brush to add strokes to show hair strands. Make sure not to overdo it, lest your hair end up looking too detailed. The closer to the shinier part you are, the less strokes you use. This helps the hair look softer overall. 

(These are the settings of the brush I’m using:

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(It’s a brush from Medibang Paint, but of course, you can apply this to other drawing softwares too!)

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6. Still on the same layer! Now, select the rightmost color, aka the darkest one! Use the airbrush tool and add some more shading. Note how the area shaded with this color is smaller than with the first color.

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7. Use the watercolor brush again, and add some more brushstrokes in the darkest color. Use this to accentuate the different sections of your hair.

Now that you’re done with shading, time to add highlights!

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8. Create a new clipping layer above your shading layer, and set its blending mode to Add (I believe this is Luminosity for Sai users). Pick the leftmost color, aka the base color for this part. I used the Pencil tool at about 50% opacity to add the highlights. The strokes are kinda longer near the ends of the locks, I think this just looks neat. Whatever works for you is ok too! 

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9. On the same layer and using the same tool, now pick your darkest color and add highlights to the darker part of your hair (don’t make these too shiny though!)

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10. Select the color of the main highlight you drew (in this case, it’s the really pale greenish blue color. Now, go back to your original base layer, and lock its transparency (meaning that once you lock it, you can’t color outside anything that’s not already drawn on the layer.) Using the airbrush, add some last shading to the main highlighted area.

Congrats, you’re done! ^^

AN OPTIONAL STEP: Create another layer over your highlights layer and set it to Overlay. Using a dark blue/purple color, you can accentuate the shadows and highlights!

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I really hope this helps! 💕