I hope with this tutorial you'll learn how to make your own model sheets, since you can only use my model sheets for so long before they'll become repetitive. =)
I opted for making it a video instead of a flash so you could see, in real time, how I make the model sheets.
The more you know! ^_^
CLICK HERE TO SEE THE VIDEO (YouTube)
After watching this video, if you have any questions I hope you comment so I can explain whatever needs explaining. ^_^
I opted for making it a video instead of a flash so you could see, in real time, how I make the model sheets.
The more you know! ^_^
CLICK HERE TO SEE THE VIDEO (YouTube)
After watching this video, if you have any questions I hope you comment so I can explain whatever needs explaining. ^_^
Category Other / Tutorials
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 500 x 500px
File Size 60 kB
I don't know of any specific Sai tutorials... but I can tell you a few good tips.
1. Ctrl + E = merge the selected layer with the layer below it.
2. Ctrl + Z = undo
3. If you color something, shade it, and then decide you don't like that particular color... like you want a jacket to be red instead of blue... instead of redoing it all, go to filter > hue and saturation. There are several slider bars you can use to adjust color, brightness, and stuff like that.
4. Use the "preserve opacity" checkbox if you're coloring something and want to shade JUST what you colored on that layer. It makes it so you can't go outside the area you've filled in with color. Play with it. Very helpful.
5. Use the "pencil" tool to draw and line your work, and use the brush, watercolor, marker, or airbrush tools for coloring. If you use them for lining, the lines end up looking weird or blurry.
6. When you open a new canvas, try to be sure the resolution is set at 300 DPI or more. It makes lines and coloring come out a LOT smoother.
1. Ctrl + E = merge the selected layer with the layer below it.
2. Ctrl + Z = undo
3. If you color something, shade it, and then decide you don't like that particular color... like you want a jacket to be red instead of blue... instead of redoing it all, go to filter > hue and saturation. There are several slider bars you can use to adjust color, brightness, and stuff like that.
4. Use the "preserve opacity" checkbox if you're coloring something and want to shade JUST what you colored on that layer. It makes it so you can't go outside the area you've filled in with color. Play with it. Very helpful.
5. Use the "pencil" tool to draw and line your work, and use the brush, watercolor, marker, or airbrush tools for coloring. If you use them for lining, the lines end up looking weird or blurry.
6. When you open a new canvas, try to be sure the resolution is set at 300 DPI or more. It makes lines and coloring come out a LOT smoother.
FA+

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