![]() ![]() The trees here I’ll just freehand and referencing my list, this is my first stab at nature’s pattern. I’m using this tool to block in the castle and a lot of the surrounding landscape. In Clip Studio Paint, if you put down a dot and then hold shift, it will give this interactive Straight line tool, which I find extremely helpful for blocking in a drawing or a basic composition. That simple list will keep me dialed in as I work, and when I finish that painting, I’ll consult that list again and ask myself, did I capture those things? So in a way, I’ve also created a little rubric in which I can grade or self-evaluate my study. ![]() That’s a clear focal point right there, and I want to make sure it comes off equally as clear in my painting. And I really like the sense of the graphic punch on that castle. I’d also like to get a sense of the non-repetitive patterns that nature makes, which I find quite difficult to pull off. I think it will be a real exercise in grays as those colors get a lot closer together back of the photo. I like the atmospheric perspective, specifically the challenge of tracking each color through depth. Here’s a photograph I’ll do a study from.īefore I jump in and start painting, I find it helpful to make a list of things I want to study. When I work in Clip Studio, I tinker around in these areas a lot. And what’s nice is as I select a different brush, I get different customizable controls. Options include brush size, opacity, the blending mode, as well as a bunch of textures you can emulate. When you click one of those, you can fine-tune that specific brush in the Tool Property palette shown below. When you click on one of them, you will have further brush selections in the Sub Tool menu. The main brushes I use to paint with are located under these four icons. I’ve set this neutral warmish gray as my default. When you make a new canvas, you can set a default paper color. Adding Depth: the atmospheric perspective.I’ll share some tips as to how I get the most out of these sketches, and along the way, I’ll outline some features of Clip Studio Paint I think are really cool. Today, I’ll put it through its paces doing some photo studies. A software I’ve been playing around a lot with lately. This video is brought to you by Clip Studio Paint. ![]()
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