I used to have a pretty much constant headache all the time for most of my life until I started painting (digitally) and saw one of the twitch streamers said, "Don't forget to hydrate." It's such a simple thing but it made such an enormous difference for my quality of life. I never even made the connection before. I thought I just bumped my head in my childhood and constant mild headaches is something I will have to get used to for the rest of my life. I did get used to it, in fact.
Can relate. My school didn't let us leave the classroom often to drink water or go to the bathroom so I got used to not drink water at all for most of the day and that made me have horrible headaches, thankfully I figured it out and get hydrated more nowadays.
A KRITA USER IN THE GOOD YEAR OF 2024 !!!!!! I've tried lots of software and apps but i've never felt more at home than in Krita 😌 it's nice to see someone else love using the software especially since i feel like the software and settings come really close to a paperlike feeling without tweaking anything
WAAAHHH IM SO GLAD RU-vid RECOMMENDED THIS I felt like classical paintings always looked so appealing but I never knew how to get that appealing feeling in my art. Thank u so much for this holyyyy
Thanks for the tutorial, this is very useful. I'm mainly a traditional artist and I want to learn to paint more but doing traditional art is expensive... getting the right paints and colors and materials would be far more costly than any digital app. Also your painting was beautiful. Subbing to your channel.
I'm glad that it was helpful! And yeah I can realte to traiditonal art being expensive, oil paint, brushes, canvas , all of it can get pretty costly. I still like the traditional look, so imitating it in digital art is an pretty good compromise
You have no idea how happy I was when I saw you painting in Krita! It's not a program I see a lot of people using, and there aren't a lot of tutorials of it either, so as a newbie Krita artist this really helps in visualizing how I can use the different types of textured brushes it has! I'll definitely have this in mind next time I draw something, thank you very much!
i was looking for this exact tutorial a few months ago but barely found any results, this is great tysm for making it!!! another useful tip i learned is to use a limited palette, since traditional artists dont have an unlimited collection like digital artists do
This is such a good tutorial/tips video! I've always wondered how some digital artists get that feeling of thick paint, and it never occurred to me that it probably is just an overlay. Glad to see another krita user in the wild.
Omg finding Krita tutorials like these is like digging up gold! As a beginner in deigital art I would've never come up with the idea of importing a background picture as an overlay 🤯
btw one of the artists youve showed at the beginning (sebijy) doesnt overlay a picture of paint texture, they sometimes overlay a picture of chicken wings 👍
Now I want to try this style 😭😭😭 I mean it's looks good on mysterious heavenly character (well maybe I will still combine it with usual anime style, just more painting...) Thank you for the information, demonstration, what to do and what not to do ❤
Wow this was really helpful. I usually try making exaggerated expressions using hatches with the basic pens, but i never thought traditional paintings were actually possible on online programs, especially krita. Thanks a lot g, you earned a sub.
Nice! Thanks for sharing. I do digital in the traditional style and have figured out a process for myself too - the similarities and differences are fascinating
Could you perhaps tell me what's different in your process? I'd love to learn more about this topic, especially since there is hardly any material about this on youtube! edit: I just noticed your videos on this topic, I'll definitely check 'em out later!
@@CinimodDraws agreed - it’s a definite gap. Or maybe the tutorials are out there but I’m just not finding them. Honestly I pretty much use the same method for my digital paintings because I don’t do so many - I mostly charcoal type drawings in digital. I would like to mix it up for the paintings/colour sketches though and do more of them - loved some of the tips around the layers for texture will try them out!
omg thank SO MUCHH for making this tut!!!!! i’ve been struggling with how to make my digital art have that ‘painted’ effect and this really helped me out!! (*´∇`*)
Great video, I agree the traditional feeling comes with not using blending digital tools and good edges control. Also, you can say "tradigital" if you like this term.
Este video me llego, asi de la nada, Pero realmente lo necesitaba mucho, debido a que me siento un poco perdido a mi estilo, y a donde quiero llegar con el mismo. Muchas gracias! las explicacion fue clara y concisa, facil de llegar , super digerible. Lo voy a intentar, me diste muchas ganas de dibujar ahora!. Gracias por recordarme de no obsecionarme con la busqueda de pinceles... Que tengas hermoso día!
man ive been trying to find a video for this look, thanks for making this video, i havent found anything like this before and lets see if your tips helped (my pen is broken so i dont have a pen pressure, so ill just use texture brush with a default 50% opacity and work from there ig)
Yeah I think putting the opacity to like 50% or 70% is a good alternative if your pen pressure isn't working. Thanks for watching, I hope it'll be helpful !
I've been leaning towards studying the old masters lately, so I really liked this video ✨ also like your calm voice I did a some studies on Sorolla, do you know him?
I'm happy you like this vid, also I haven't heard of sorolla before! Just checked that painter's work out, and it looks really amazing, the colors variations and shapes are especially appealing
When I started learning to draw, I was terrible at it, it naturally was at the level of a child because I hadn't learned how to draw. The thing that kept me going tho was that whenever I finished a drawing I thought "Oh that's pretty good", even though from my perspective today these drawings were terrible. Even now, when I look at my recent drawings, I go "Damn that's pretty neat", but I also know that in a few years I'll look back to today and think "meh, it was okay". The thing I'm trying to say is being terrible at drawing isn't a bad thing, in fact everyone is terrible in the beginning. But every artist, even the most famous ones, became famous by just continuing to draw. I'm no motivational speeker or sth but I just wanna say that being 'terrible' at art right now shouldn't be a reason not to start learning. Because even if you feel like you aren't improving, if you practice and learn, improvement is inevitable. (Places to start to learn are "Drawing Like A Sir", or similar youtubers)
O leigo na internet fica discutindo a mídia superior e sempre descamba para uma diminuição covarde do meio digital como inferior, muitas vezes diminuindo o artista do digital. Eu vejo que isso é um dialogo medíocre pois o artista faz a arte e não o meio e o digital, o 3D, a escultura o tradicional, no fim todos eles partem de um mesmo princípio e o artista digital consegue transpor muitos desses mundos em resumo o digital não 3é inferior e ele tem ferramentas que conseguem passar pelo tradicional e as pessoas nem percebem isso, porque não olham para a arte eles olham para o meio e como alguém que quer ser artista sei que a culpa é do artista na maioria dos casos e não da ferramenta.
haha do I? It's just really strange to speak into my mic while knowing that there isn't anybody I'm talking to at that moment, so I end up speaking quite softly :D
I really like your voice actually, I don’t enjoy art videos where I feel I’m being shouted at so your channel is a nice break from it :) really easy to focus and pay attention