Comments: 10
olitiger [2012-10-14 03:20:07 +0000 UTC]
aw nice dave, must say though that is one BIg sword
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olitiger In reply to olitiger [2012-10-24 05:06:55 +0000 UTC]
oh baby, its ok its still great uvu!!
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DeadMenace In reply to olitiger [2012-10-23 23:38:53 +0000 UTC]
Thank you, but yes, it's pretty ridiculously sized. I was too lazy to fix it after I scanned it. ;A; //sobbing//
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graphicnovellife [2012-10-07 19:16:57 +0000 UTC]
super cute~ like how you colored htis
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DeadMenace In reply to graphicnovellife [2012-10-07 19:19:22 +0000 UTC]
Thanks! It was fun to colour traditional art digitally, not something I usually do. c:
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graphicnovellife In reply to DeadMenace [2012-10-07 22:04:28 +0000 UTC]
i've really wanted to do it but I've never figured it out xD
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DeadMenace In reply to graphicnovellife [2012-10-07 22:15:21 +0000 UTC]
Well if you have GIMP it's really simple, there's a colour to alpha command that will remove most, if not all of the white from your traditional lines! c:
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graphicnovellife In reply to DeadMenace [2012-10-07 22:22:07 +0000 UTC]
ooh! I do use gimp :'3 is there a tutorial or something for this stuff?
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DeadMenace In reply to graphicnovellife [2012-10-07 23:06:25 +0000 UTC]
Um, I could give you a brief description of how to do it. It's pretty easy actually. I was so frustrated when I found it, I realized there was actually an easy way of doing it. XD
Okay so, step 1: Scan or take a photo of your cleaned up sketch/lineart. Open in whichever editing program you use and play with the contrast until the lines are more defined.
Step 2: Open in GIMP, or if you're already in GIMP you're all set to begin.
Step 3:
Go to "Layer", then "Transparency" and then "Colour to Alpha" Then the white should be gone from your lines!
If you try it and it doesn't work let me know. I may have missed a step. ;v; Hope this helps!
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