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Oct 2020

Im a stubborn traditionalist scribbler that moved to digital due to space/storage.
It was an uphill struggle and took a bit of modification to get comfortable with it (paper screen protector/Noris digital etc) it just feels odd coming from paper to slippy screens.
My profile pic represents my frustration! XD

While there are many tools at my disposal with digital my (own) rules are basically draw it all by hand with Autodesk Sketchbook. Digi ink and eraser (the best thing about digital. Erasing ink!)
The only other thing (digitally cheat wise) is that I use is pre drawn panel templates and pre drawn drawn BG's (for some repeated panels) and text (my hand writing skills are appalling) but aside from that I approach my strip as drawing straight on (digital) paper. I draw my own speech bubbles.
Heart>Arm>Pen :wink:
I do not use any line correction tools,resizing etc
I try to use digital as a tool and not as a crutch.

Off topic rant.
Im going to be unpopular but how does one improve ones drawing skill if they rely on Photoshop and the like to correct proportions and neaten up linework? I see it going on so much on live streams.
Id rather have "bad" drawing with character than clean lines and no personality.
Anywayyyy apologies but that's just how I feel about it!

I started from paper and pen. When I first switched to digital, it was mainly about not getting used to tablets. It took time to get used to, but only one week or so.

Paper Pen

First few times with tablet

After 15chapters or so

So, to any who is struggling to use a tablet, just START! and push through chapter 1. it will get better and better.

Self promotion here :

I used to be an oil painter back in college, so spent a lot of my younger years doing traditional drawing/painting, so there is some background, but extremely rusty (2007):

2018 - bought an inexpensive Wacom because I really missed doing art and figured I could make some fun things for friends and family. I read an insane amount of manga so of course I ended up starting on a comic with the husband. Silly me put one of the mcs in the body of a cat, knowing full well I sucked at drawing cats consistently and abandoned the project when work/life got busy.

2019 - switched to iPad.

2020 - lost my job and drawing all the time as of June-July. :slight_smile: Can't wait to check again in a year and cringe!

You know I love your work already, but that oil painting is amazing! Have you tried something similar but digitally? I mean a whole comic like that would be torture, but I'm now imagining your OCs painted. :grin::heart:

I lost so much old art from back in the day, but I have one of my first pieces of digital art here (I only drew traditional up until then):

I would describe my current process as something like this now:

I use both traditional and digital media, and yolo everything on my itty-bitty drawing tablet. I don't need a big one, haha.

This is some of my recent work now:

Thank you for smashing today's batch of self doubt demons <3.

I've tried but I'm a super tactile artist! I end up getting frustrated with the brushes in clip/apple pencil combo if I want them to be something they're not. The other problem is I can't visualize lighting/shadows/color in my head so without a model it would probably be pretty nasty-looking :frowning:.

No.

kidding, anyway
I slowly converted to digital because of convenience and really, there's so much power with digital. Of course you can do the same stuff with skill on paper, but it's really becoming the norm to incorporate some digital into your work (most manga artists have been converting to digital with some exceptions)

I still like everything to be my work, even if I use 3d software of such as a short cut. For example my comic,

The building is clearly 3d and used as a "shortcut" in these pages and other pages where I trace it. But I made this building myself in a 3d program.

This is what digital allows us to do. Can make things easier or more interesting.


This was how I first started using digital when I was about 90/10 traditional. (I did something way back when too but I can't find that old old stuff)

Then it became 10/90. I still draft by hand most of the time.

I’m pretty new to art in general. I only started drawing back in April of this year. I started out doing the free Draw A Box online class in traditional ink and paper. I did that for about a month before I figured out that digital was the way I wanted to go. I feel like I was really lucky to get into digital art when I did because the combo of software and hardware options along with learning resources available right now is just amazing.

Here is the very first page of my comic.

And here is the most recent panel I’ve published.

I’m still learning. But I feel like I’m gradually getting better at this.

That's the fastest "gradual" I've ever seen, haha. Awesome progress!

Thanks! There are still a lot of things I struggle to draw, but I’m a fast learner I guess. And like everybody else I’m my own worst critic. I think digital drawing tools really help decrease the difficulty level when it comes to the learning curve of teaching yourself how to draw.

So I don't have any from the absolute start but I do have some from pretty early on when I go my first tablet. I did stuff with a mouse on the school computers with photoshop before and a lot of work and traditional stuff so I have a pretty solid staring point. And I did a lot of drawing traditionally and then scanning the sketch, which really helps the transition.

This is from 2015 when I go my first tablet.

And my latest in a roughly similar style.

I've been drawing on paper for pretty much all of my life, but began doing digital art (sort of) nine years ago. With a mouse, because I had no way of getting a tablet at the time. I was mostly coloring my scanned drawings, but sometimes doodled with the mouse too. It was all seriously straining my wrist though :joy:

(this is one such doodle from 2015)

I bought a tablet (to be specific, a cheap-ass second hand wacom lol) a year ago and it was surprisingly difficult for me to get used to it... it felt so completely different from drawing on paper. Ironically, my tablet sketches were worse than some of my old mouse drawings.
Took me around four months to even begin getting comfortable with it, and it took a whole year before I felt I could draw with a tablet the same as on paper. But I still prefer drawing on paper in some ways tbh (though I don't do it much recently). It was a long and arduous journey, but I'm glad I have not given up!

One of my first tablet drawings...

Part of my recent work (WIP)

This is one of the oldest digital drawings I have. It was before I had a tablet, so I'd draw in MS Paint with either a mouse or a laptop track pad.


I got a drawing tablet and paint tool sai back in 2014. The thing that I find most difficult about digital drawing is line art. I still heavily rely on a stabilizer. I don't know how artist can do without one.


This is where I'm at now. I use CSP now and I still have the same tablet, plus an iPad for drawing on the go. I think the iPad is a lil more slippery than a tablet, but it's quick to get used to and they also have screen protectors that mimic paper if it helps. I kinda prefer the iPad more since I can draw directly on the screen, but I still need a stabilizer.

I had just finished my first year of college and was still new to it. My roommate who was a classmate of mine was very talented and she taught me a lot about digital painting on Photoshop, since it's not something we covered in Photoshop class. I studied art, animation & web design.

I think this is the first digitally coloured piece. But, the drawing itself was done in my sketchbook. (Photoshop, 2004)

This is the first fully digital piece I did. It's one of the draft designs of the Winter castle for my current comic series.(Photoshop, 2005)

And this is my latest piece from this month. The cover for the newest chapter of my comic series.(Clip Studio Paint, 2020)