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I'm looking to add some pastels to my tools. What's a good starter for oil pastels and soft pastels? I'm open to a kit, or I can buy a individual colors from a good brand. I'm looking for good quality but I'm not buying top shelf stuff that'll break the bank.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 21:25 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 03:12 |
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Xun posted:Thanks guys! Bob Ross is really awesome but since I struggle a lot with painting digitally I figured I should learn/relearn how to paint in real life, and sadly watercolors are way cheaper and more portable than oils/acrylics Shibasaki seems so nice, looking forward to following along Watercolors bear a lot of similarities to oil and acrylic paints, but they also bear a lot of similarities to drawing with wet media. I took to watercolor because it feels a lot like drawing with a brush and ink. I also feel like I didn't know how to paint until I took a couple of watercolor classes for my studio art minor.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 21:38 |
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Star Man posted:Watercolors bear a lot of similarities to oil and acrylic paints, but they also bear a lot of similarities to drawing with wet media. I took to watercolor because it feels a lot like drawing with a brush and ink. I also feel like I didn't know how to paint until I took a couple of watercolor classes for my studio art minor. Just wanna add a quick thing to previous posts: Don't skimp on watercolor paper! You can get away with cheap brushes. You can get away with student-grade paints. But nothing can salvage a piece painted on bad paper. And good paper is super affordable. You'll find a brand you prefer, you'll find whether or not you'll like textured or smooth, you'll find if you prefer hot or cold press...That all comes with experimentation. You'll see weight grades on notebooks and paper pads that look like this: I won't use any paper of 100 lb or less with watercolor or gouache. It buckles, it's less absorbent, you won't be able to move the paint. The heavier the better. 140lb is my go-to.
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# ? Oct 14, 2019 21:48 |
Franchescanado posted:good paper is super affordable.
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# ? Oct 15, 2019 00:02 |
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lofi posted:Print it out, draw your new layer on tracing paper on top. Tech is cute, but it just doesn't prioritise the same things as the human eye. You're right, I guess I was looking to shortcut the more annoying part of that work, esp. if it would help with colour separation (vs. what I've been doing with monochromatic prints).
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# ? Oct 15, 2019 02:29 |
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What do you use that's so expensive? I can get 12-24 paintings out of a $17 Arches Watercolor pad, a $11 Strathmore notebook will last me three months. I've never had issues with $8 pads from Canson if I wanna do larger pieces. Canson makes a spiral notebook with 140 lb watercolor paper that also makes a good travel book. And watercolor pads go on sale all the time at art supplies stores. My local art supplies sells high quality watercolor paper in huge sizes for around $8 if I want to do something gigantic, or cut them down into a dozen smaller sheets.
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# ? Oct 15, 2019 02:46 |
That's not nothing. I'm super broke, and watercolour hurts. The £1 = $1 conversion on prices doesn't help.
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# ? Oct 15, 2019 09:56 |
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You can normally buy single large sheets you can cut up and use for whatever. It winds up being substantially cheaper.
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# ? Oct 17, 2019 01:25 |
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Is there a "ask a goon for an avatar" thread? Or an easy place to hire goon artists for a small task like avatars?
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# ? Nov 1, 2019 05:15 |
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Franchescanado posted:What do you use that's so expensive? These are great. Thank you for the links!
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# ? Nov 1, 2019 05:17 |
JIZZ DENOUEMENT posted:Is there a "ask a goon for an avatar" thread? https://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3527487&pagenumber=16&perpage=40
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# ? Nov 1, 2019 05:24 |
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e. nvm, found my answer.
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# ? Nov 9, 2019 06:57 |
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Illustrator CC question: My dye-sub vendor gave me a document with swatches of his most common colors...Kelly Green, Royal Blue, etc. They're tuned for his specific setup, and each is named..."Emerald PW," for example. When I copy-paste the Emerald PW swatch into a new document, it doesn't bring the swatch name with it...I have to drag it into the Swatches toolbox, then rename it from "R=0 G=85 B=40 1" to "Emerald PW". I have other pre-built color catalogs in Illustrator, and when I copy-paste those swatches into a new document, the swatch name travels with it, and the swatch is automatically added to the Swatches toolbox when I paste it into the new doc. How can I get this new swatch catalog file to behave the same way? edit: Mac OS Mojave Lincoln fucked around with this message at 14:21 on Nov 13, 2019 |
# ? Nov 13, 2019 14:09 |
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This is just a stab in the dark, but by any chance are the swatches in the problem library left as normal colors, while the other libraries are spot colors?
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# ? Nov 13, 2019 18:28 |
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Is there anything that's like, a big .ZIP file or torrent of commonly used video tropes, or heck, even the old 20s cartoon type stuff/big internet video archive sites... Some kind of compact huge download of Jojo greenscreens and usable footage for free. does that exist. rawr xD
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# ? Dec 12, 2019 03:41 |
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What are these little glass/plastic tools I see Japanese artists using with their brushes? I can't find the name of them or where to get one. https://twitter.com/djdabblin/status/1202001273702289409?s=20 It's like a guide with a ruler, as seen in the first few seconds of this video, and again 30 seconds in
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# ? Dec 12, 2019 14:40 |
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Is there a thread about ironing beads somewhere? If not I'll start one
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# ? Dec 18, 2019 00:44 |
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Franchescanado posted:What are these little glass/plastic tools I see Japanese artists using with their brushes? I can't find the name of them or where to get one. Usually just called an artists bridge or hand rest. never seen one with the sticky outy thingy tho.
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# ? Dec 18, 2019 05:59 |
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Vitamin Me posted:Is there a thread about ironing beads somewhere? If not I'll start one Perler beads? The closest we have I think is the pixel art thread, but that's only half of the puzzle with beading. I bet the pixel art thread could handle being the bead thread too, though.
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# ? Dec 18, 2019 16:36 |
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I'm stumped right now, trying to look for a term to help me do some research. I have a drawing right now in black and white. It's actually white on black. I want to make a variation on the design if I ever want to print black on white. I dont want to do this as a negative, i want the tones to remain consistent (as much as possible) I'm stuck because i think there should be a word for what i'm trying to do, isolating a drawing so that it can work with whatever background it'll end up in. That's the design. I guess I'm looking for a way to knockout the black background in as clean a way as possible without effecting the black on the drawing itself? Should this have been something I'd have done from the very beginning? I worked pretty flat to get this where I wanted it to be on Adobe Fresco. I'm wanting to not have to trace with the lasso tool at 2 in the morning if I can help it.
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# ? Jan 10, 2020 07:40 |
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You should be able to get a rough start with a color selection tool set to low tolerance and contingous selection turned on. ed: research shows Fresco is an ipad tool with no magic wand so lmao yes you'll have to do it by hand or send it to photoshop or any other tool with color selection. more generally if you want something that's isolated from the background, you should work on it in its own layer so you can just export it without the background Synthbuttrange fucked around with this message at 07:57 on Jan 10, 2020 |
# ? Jan 10, 2020 07:53 |
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When learning art fundamentals, is there an order that should be taken, or is it not that important? For example how important is perspective when studying anatomy/figure drawing. I can’t afford to go to art classes so I’m having to self learn and not having any direction has made me stop and start a lot and waste time where I could have been drawing.
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# ? Jan 11, 2020 12:11 |
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Crosspost from the getting paid for your art sticky thread, but I figured here would be a good spot to ask as well. I'm commissioning my niece to convert an ink drawing I did to a vector file (is this the right term?) so I can have some shirts or stickers printed. I'm not going to sell the stuff, got no plans to license the design, profit from it in any way, or any of that. I just like the drawing and some other people do too, enough to want a sticker or shirt maybe. Anyhow, I'm sending her a scan of the drawing, and she says she should be able to do it in Illustrator pretty easily. She's a junior in an art program at a big university, very good at what she does, extremely hard working, all that. So I want to pay her the appropriate rate, but I'm not entirely sure she'll give me the fair market price since we're family. So if some rando from the internet emailed you a drawing, said "convert to an image file that could be used with screen printing or vinyl stickers, go hog wild cleaning up whatever you think needs it," what would you charge?
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# ? Feb 12, 2020 20:28 |
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How complicated is the image? It'd probably cost you $40 but I'd send her $100, she's in art school so it'll be fun for her to hold that amount of money, she'll never again get the chance.
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# ? Feb 12, 2020 20:38 |
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VelociBacon posted:How complicated is the image? It'd probably cost you $40 but I'd send her $100, she's in art school so it'll be fun for her to hold that amount of money, she'll never again get the chance. It's not especially complex. It's taken me probably 3-4 hours total from first draft to current draft, most of which was tracing from the first draft.
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# ? Feb 12, 2020 21:11 |
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Most freelance illustrators I've worked with professionally will charge somewhere between $40-200+ per hour depending on their skill level, experience, and how comfortable they are asking for money (which is something commercial artists are notoriously bad at).
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# ? Feb 12, 2020 21:36 |
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Yeah, I hear that a lot. I was really proud of my niece a couple years ago when, during her freshman year, she made a post on her art Instagram page telling people to stop asking her for free drawings and tattoo designs and stuff if they weren't willing to pay. I think she picked up early on that she's got to be a bulldog about getting what she deserves for her work.
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# ? Feb 12, 2020 22:24 |
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There's also the standard "ask for their rate, then double it" thing that works pretty well for family/friends who undercharge.
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# ? Feb 12, 2020 22:37 |
ijyt posted:When learning art fundamentals, is there an order that should be taken, or is it not that important? For example how important is perspective when studying anatomy/figure drawing. Perspective helps you to understand shapes as 3D, which helps you construct figures. You can usually scrape by with a minimal knowledge, but for extreme angles and foreshortening it really makes things easier. I'd recommend drawabox.com for practical perspective and thinking in 3D, it's a really solid foundation in drawing pretty much anything. Plus it's free, that helps a lot.
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# ? Feb 13, 2020 00:36 |
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I wouldn't say there was a prescribed order for learning art, but I think a common mistake is to get bogged down in trying to learn how to do specific details when you should be first concentrating on broader ideas. For example, as a kid, I thought it would be a good idea to memorize all the muscles in a book I found on artistic anatomy. In the long run, I had (and am still having) to relearn all of it anyway because I didn't have a good foundation in gesture and structure. A figure with good gesture and structure will still read well, while one with all the muscles and no such understanding will just end up looking all blobby. Incidentally, don't underestimate the value of seemingly simple exercises like learning to draw boxes or making two value studies. You may think the same thing I did--"oh yeah I'm good at that, I used to draw things like that all the time in my sketchbooks so I can probably skip these exercises"--but it's very different when you're asked to learn them in service of a bigger goal such as portraits or figure drawing. So off the top of my head, here's some things that I obsessed over before I rightfully should have: 1. Knowing the muscles -- as I mentioned, learn gesture and structure first 2. Choosing the right colors -- yeah it's important eventually, but learn values (how to properly use light and dark) first 3. How do I draw a building/mountain/etc -- learn perspective first 4. What brushes to use, how to get this particular texture or effect, etc -- composition is more important; brushes and textures just add punch 5. Being able to draw from imagination -- instead, don't be ashamed to draw from reference! And so on. This is a lot easier said than done, and I still make those mistakes myself. Also, in practice, you'll probably end up learning a little of everything gradually instead of learning one aspect at a time (eg: ideally you would make dozens of grayscale paintings before you even think about using any color, but goddammit that's no fun), but hopefully you'll have a better idea of how to direct your focus to when trying to learn from your experiences. Regarding perspective, I would consider it pretty essential from the start, but you probably don't need to know the fancier perspective tricks until later. It may seem obvious now, but when I read a Loomis book and saw how perspective applies to figure drawing even when not doing extreme angles, my mind was blown. It was like... oh yeah, that's why the things I draw look so mushy and warped, why didn't I think of that.
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# ? Feb 13, 2020 17:53 |
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InDesign Question. I'm printing odd-sized greeting cards at home. What I'd like to do is take a large sheet of cardstock and print several identical cards on it. I know you can link text frames to continue a block of text across, but is there a way to link frames so they mirror the same text? And same question with photos, can I drop and arrange a photo in one frame and it will appear the same in the other frames? Or is the only way to do this to get one set of frames how I like them, group them, and then copy/paste additional copies into the page?
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# ? Feb 13, 2020 18:56 |
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I don't usually venture into this subforum and there is such a wealth of information I figured I'd be insultingly lazy and just post a question, apologies I'm not a total rear end in a top hat! If I wanted to find some very basic artwork for album covers from goon artists on the cheap would there be a good location for that in this forum? The album artwork is just for a music library so it doesn't have to be unbelievable works of art but it would have to be unique and not shown elsewhere on the internet. For example, this music library (a MUCH bigger and wealthier library than our fledgling one) has album artwork and we're going for this vibe: https://search.audiomachine.com/albums Do you think you fine and creative goons might steer me in the right direction? I have no idea what people pay for this stuff but our library is launching soon and I need like five album covers now and conceivably hundreds more in the future as we grow. Thoughts?
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# ? Feb 13, 2020 21:29 |
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Generally I think an SA MART thread is the way to go for that until you find an artist you like.
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# ? Feb 13, 2020 21:34 |
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I guess I could do that but I'd need to know how much to pay per image and then pay up front for something being created from scratch and have no reference to the level of what I receive and no matter what it looks like I need to pay for it. Just kind of risky but I guess it's not out of the realm of possibility. Thanks for the guidance!
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# ? Feb 13, 2020 21:48 |
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kiimo posted:I guess I could do that but I'd need to know how much to pay per image and then pay up front for something being created from scratch and have no reference to the level of what I receive and no matter what it looks like I need to pay for it. Just kind of risky but I guess it's not out of the realm of possibility. Thanks for the guidance! What's important for the artist is how many you need and what your budget is. From there they can laugh you out of the room or work out what you can get for that budget, and then plan the process of how many proofs you'll get and how many revisions you can ask for. From there you'll pay some percentage up front, get your proofs and approve, pay the rest and get the finals. It's up to you to look at the artist's portfolio and judge if they can deliver what you want.
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# ? Feb 13, 2020 21:58 |
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That seems logical. Okay thanks guys
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# ? Feb 13, 2020 22:00 |
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If you want an unlimited number of things that look like album covers you can make them on artbreeder.com The TOS requires you to license everything you make as CC0, but with a paid account you can make all your album covers private so nobody can grab the cc0 files from the website. Replace the AI Runes with English and this is perfectly acceptable https://i.imgur.com/GCvpqaB.jpg Tunicate fucked around with this message at 23:34 on Feb 13, 2020 |
# ? Feb 13, 2020 23:31 |
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kiimo posted:I guess I could do that but I'd need to know how much to pay per image and then pay up front for something being created from scratch and have no reference to the level of what I receive and no matter what it looks like I need to pay for it. Just kind of risky but I guess it's not out of the realm of possibility. Thanks for the guidance! You got some pretty good advice already and it seems like you're on the right track but you have some false assumptions here:
This probably sounds a lot saltier than I intend it to - I just want to dispel the myth that buying artwork is some kind of mystery box where you put in as much money as requested and just hope you get something you like.
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# ? Feb 21, 2020 13:25 |
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What is this weave/art style called? Becoming popular in textiles lately. It looks southwestern USA inspired, I think?
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# ? Feb 29, 2020 18:52 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 03:12 |
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Native American, to be absurdly broad
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# ? Feb 29, 2020 20:16 |