Welome to Comix Tuts

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Monday, April 11, 2011

Inking In Adobe Flash

1. Setting Up the Sketch

First, create a new document in Flash. The size and other settings aren’t that important.

Next, choose ‘insert’ and select ‘new symbol’

When the new symbol dialogue pops up, create a symbol called ’sketch’ with behaviour set to ‘movie clip’

Now I’m going to get the sketch I saved in Photoshop. If you’re sketching in Flash you can skip this step.
Choose ‘Import’, then ‘Import to Library’, and select the sketch file. That image will appear in the Flash Library (hit CTRL-L to view the library).

There should be two items in the Library now- a movie clip called ’sketch’ and the drawing you’ve imported from Photoshop. In the Library window, double-click on ’sketch’ to open up the movie object. Then, drag your drawing (in my case jerbilay.png) into the main work space. You can use Flash’s transform tools to rotate or scale the sketch, if needed.

In the top left, above the timeline, click ‘Scene 1′ to return to the main screen.
Now, drag the ’sketch’ object from the library into the workspace. You’ll see that since it’s a movie object, it has some different options from the drawing ‘bitmap’ object type. You can adjust those options using the Properties menu (CTRL-F3 or Window > Properties)
Click on the ’sketch’ object in the main workspace to select it.
Then in the Properties menu, set the mode in the ‘Color’ dropdown menu to ‘Alpha’. Adjust the alpha until the sketch appears light gray- mine is set to 34%. Lightening the sketch makes it much easier to ink over later. If your sketch is light already, you can skip this step.

My sketch is pretty big, there’s not quite enough room in the main work space. So, I’ll convert this to another movie object. Click your ’sketch’ object to select it, and choose ‘Workspace’ > Convert to Symbol. I’ll call my new symbol ‘inks’, and make it a movie object.
Double-click ‘inks’ in the Library window, and it should open.

Check out the timeline at the top left. There’s one layer already, which has my ’sketch’ object inside it- I called that layer ’sketch’ too.
Click the ‘new layer’ button, and create another layer on top named ‘inks’. This is where the magic’s gonna happen!

2. Inking Tools and Tricks


Locking a layer prevents any inadvertent editing. Click the dot underneath the lock icon to lock your sketch layer.
Zoom in at the level you want for inking- I usually choose 200%.
Now, set up the brush tool- I select the smallest brush size, and activate the ‘use pressure’ option, which is the button that looks like a swoosh.
Make sure your ‘inks’ layer is selected, and ink away!
    A few tips to keep in mind:
  • Using multiple layers for inking makes it easier to manage some complex illustrations with overlapping shapes, BUT remember that the Flash eraser tool works on all visible layers. Make sure you Lock layers you don’t want to erase!
  • Changing the color of the ink is easy- click the ‘inks’ layer, and change the color using the fill bucket tool.
  • You can use the Selection tool to pick areas you want to ‘Smooth’ or ‘Straighten’. It’s pretty handy sometimes.
  • The brush size scales according to the image zoom, so if you need to zoom in or out to work some details, you might need to adjust your brush.
  • Undo is your friend! If you want a particularly smooth curve, just sketch it a couple times, and press ‘CTRL-Z’ to undo the weaker lines. It may take a couple tries for the best result. Sketch, undo, sketch, undo, sketch until it looks just right.
  • Add friction. If your strokes are too quick, and are getting overly smoothed by Flash, put a piece of paper on top of your drawing tablet. The extra friction on the surface with slow your strokes and give you greater control over their appearance.

When you’re finished inking, you can delete the ’sketch’ layer, leaving just the inks.
Then you can finish coloring your work in Flash, ‘Export’ the image as a PNG and color it in Photoshop or another digital program, or even print it out and color with traditional media.

Supplies

To get the best results for your comics,you have to be well organized and be well stocked up on your supplies!for all you draditional pencil and paper comic artist here is a great site to stock up on that ,specializes in comic supplies!

Thursday, April 7, 2011

LOADING BRUSHES INTO GIMP ON WINDOWS

If you downloaded them from somewhere like deviantart.com, then they likely came in a .zip file. First you will need to unzip this file. This can usually be done by simply right clicking on the .zip file and selecting "Extract All" or something similar depending on what operating system you are using.

After you've extracted the brushes from the zip file, you just need to move them to your GIMP brushes folder. For me, I'm running Windows Vista, and the folder I have to put them in is found at C:\Users\UserName\.gimp-2.6\brushes, but it may be different for you.

To find out exactly which folder you need to place your brushes in, start GIMP and go to Edit>Preferences. In the window that pops up, find "Folders" in the list on the left. Click the little "+" symbol next to it to expand this option, if it isn't already expanded. Then you should see "Brushes" listed below it. Click "Brushes" and then in the right side of the window you should see a list of the folder locations where GIMP will look for your brushes. You need to put your brushes in one of those folders for GIMP to be able to see them (actually you can put them in any folder you want, but then you have to tell GIMP where that folder is, so it knows where to look).

inking in GIMP

SIMPLE TUT ON INKING ANIME WITH GIMP

http://tgfcoder.deviantart.com/art/Anime-and-Manga-with-The-GIMP-66019494

GIMP painting tut

heres a nice Painting tutorial for Gimp users,nice use of highlights link below


http://kalaalog.com/2008/02/17/painting-little-furry-devil

Superhero Coloring Tutorial

coloring

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Fonts

Fonts play a key role in comics,they can let you distinguish between characters, create sound effects like the very memorable wolverine , SNIKT!! or  help you create that cool cover logo. Dafont is a great free website with a great library of free fonts ,link below.
dafont.com