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D R A W I N G T U T O R I A L S
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Once
you have your character all colored in,
you may wish to add a background. Even a
sloppy background can really bring your
picture to life. ;) I sketched up a quick
background, which consisted of a city and
some mountains, and put the sketch in a
layer beneath the main picture. I then
made the sketch transparent using the same
method described in part 1. However, it's
probably smarter to include the background
in your first sketch; I just didn't think
about it until after scanning in the inked
version of this picture. ^_^; Anyway, make
sure the outline for the background layer
is transparent.
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Next, fill in the
base colors of the background using the
polygonal lasso tool. Okay, I know the
background I drew isn't the most exciting
in the world, but it's my first try at
adding a hand drawn background, so bear
with me. ^_^
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Once the main colors
are set down, add shading to the
background so it doesn't look so flat.
This part takes a little while... It is
usually a big help to have some reference
pictures, because I don't know about you,
but I personally find coloring landscapes
challenging. ^_^ Of course, that's
probably because I don't practice nearly
enough... ^_~
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Once I colored in
the background, I added a few lighting
effects to make it look a little nicer. I
added a lens flare right above the
mountains (this is one time when a lens
flare would be appropriate; they are
generally only seen when a light is
shining directly into the camera), and
added some streaks of light. To get the
light streaks, I created another layer
between the background and the character,
used the polygonal lasso tool to make
large, flat triangle shapes, filled them
in with pure white, blurred them out with
a guassian blur, set the layer to "Soft
Light" instead of normal, and adjusted the
opacity of the layer to about
70%.
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You're almost done now.
:) If you like, create a layer on top of
all the others. On this layer, you will
put extra highlights and touchups. Take a
light airbrush set to a low pressure
(20-40%), and carefully add light to areas
with highlights, such as the lighter areas
of the metallic areas on the headdress in
the picture to the right. This gives them
an added shiny-ness. :)
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Whew, almost done!
:) Now, all you have to do is compress
your file. If you have the memory to
spare, you may wish to keep an
uncompressed version of your picture for
future use (you may want to make prints or
wallpapers out of it). Still, if you plan
on posting your picture on the internet,
you need to compress it and save it in
either JPEG or GIF format. There is
nothing more annoying than having to wait
half an hour waiting to receive a 2 meg
file that someone sent, because he or she
didn't know how to properly compress the
file. To shrink the file size down, go to
the Layers Menu at the top menu bar, then
go to "Flatten Image". This will flatten
all the layers together. You cannot save
in JPEG format unless you flatten the
image. At this point, you may need to
adjust the size of the image, too. Try not
to make the picture any more than 800
pixels in either direction; it's best to
have the picture fit on one screen. Next,
just go to "save as", and select JPEG
format from the pull down menu. When
prompted, pick a compression rate to save
it as. I recommend a compression rate of
either 6 or 7, because it trims the file
size down nicely without sacrificing too
much quality. Trust me, it's pretty hard
to tell the difference between a level 10
compressed file and a level 6 compressed
file. ^_^
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