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Feb 2021

The way you incorporate color alongside your beautifully dark-skinned characters is always such a magical sight to behind. The way you color is either perfectly crafted to your writing and world building in Jade Kingdoms1 or vice versa. Either way, it's just so magical to see how you have such a fine understanding of jewel tones and color highlights that work together and make your characters looks so elegant and otherworldly.

I love your take on switching up what's expected from a vibrantly colored world by mixing in the horrors that lurk with the same colors as the protagonist. It's totally surprising to see, but a neat take to the world you have crafted and makes you have to look beyond the surface to see what dubiousness lies beneath the bright lights.

That's what's up! Experimenting with color is a fantastic way to bring variety into your work. You go with being able to memorize your colors bc I need my palettes saved for reference haha.

Thanks for sharing!
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Honey I'm blushing over here, thank you so much for seeing what I try to convey into this strange, yet magical world full of my wacky ideas. :green_heart:

That's what's up! It is pretty fun once all the linework stuff is done (and my colors are selected haha). Finding a style that works for comics that you can be happy with quality wise and the time investment it will take to complete a page in said style is a journey in itself for sure. I love to work more painterly, but it's just not time conscious for me when trying to complete pages :sweat_01:. The style I settled on has grown on me a lot though and I enjoy making the trippy color spots that cloak my characters :).

Your lighting looks fantastic in the examples of your work you have shown and I love how varied your light sources are too! Ok then, that's what's up! Instead of trying to change each color individually, you work with the lighting and shading source colors. Do you do this through overlays or airbrushing? I'm curious. I've been playing around with different ways of setting the mood that doesn't require so much individual color picking haha :purple_heart:

I love your approach to think about lighting so early in the planning phase too! It's such mood seter, and I can feel so many types of emotions radiating from your examples based on the lighting and what you chose to highlight in the scene. Lovely job!!

I doooooooo haha and I'm defiantly still evolving for sure :purple_heart: tyty!

Yooooo It's fantastic that you have found a system that works with your colorblindness, extra layers, and all lol! It works fantastically in your work so I'd say totally worth it. I love the use of color gradients to add consistency through a page and for setting the tone. It's such a simple thing, but it just really adds an element of atmosphere and mood that totally aids in setting the stage. I really need to play around with it more for moody scenes at least. I love how you really work color theory as a design element to make your work stand out too. Artistic License is a thing and I'm a fan of using it when it makes a scene look cooler. Be darned technically correct haha!!

Thank you for sharing about your process in-depth, It's been pretty dang insightful and just plain neat!

So excellent! I do both (although grayscale is actually way harder for some reason???) and your colouring is so gorgeous and vibrant. I’m not sure if you colour by paint brush or fill in the blank spaces with a paint can sort of tool, but something that’s drastically cut down on my colouring time is Krita’s smart paint bucket tool. Even though I don’t draw with fill bold lines, it always manages to fill in the drawing the way I intended. I definitely recommend it to anyone who spends more than an hour filling in colour blocks ^^

I think that's a pretty intuitive way to learn about color theory and what works with that. Drawing from nature is a fantastic resource for sure and if you are looking for any other resources on color and light, the twitter post I listed is fantastic, but in particular I would check out James Gurney's book Color and Light. It's a fantastic resources that works on many levels for folks working in color (he also makes blog where many chapters in the book are listed for free in the arhives) weather digitally or traditionally.

Ty for the :purple_heart: Marnsoa. Means a ton to m e :D!!

Yoooo Offbased you got a gal over here blushing haha! Though I'm so glad you enjoy what I post bc I just love being able to talk with other folks entrenched in the creative side of life and hearing about all the ways in which folks tackle subjects regarding creating is just :heart_03: for me!

I think it worked out fantastically! Your dragons in Night Riders have so much life in them due to how expressionate their body language is and them faceeeessss (gyahhh) and I feel like as whimsical of a choice that it was, it was definitely a complementing choice for your style and characters :purple_heart: I also think it says something for your skill as a character designer when you can have colors that are very similar in your cast yet still be able to distinguish each character apart from the other :D!

Looking forward to meeting them! I love their character portraits!! So much personality from those little pics!

High-Fives on the Gurney Jurney yo! The dude knows what he is talking about and I tell folks to check it out whenever they ask about colors.

Ok then! It's never to late to learn something new Miss and thank you for sharing links and tips to what's been helping you on your journey with colors!!

Yassss transitional colors! I love the inclusion of that tip over just color picking from your canvas to blend colors. I also super love that it's a makeup tip!! Goes to show how there is inspiration and things we can learn from all around us :purple_heart:

That's what's up! Color is really a whole nother world with all the nuances and complexities it can add. Not to say that grayscale and black and white don't have these complexities bc they do, but not having to worry about hue and focus on contrast and value narrows the focus a bit, or so I like to think, but not everyone has the same thoughts on that so neat hearing that color is more natural to you!

Oh I'm loving the individual goals you have set for your color evolution journey too! I think that's super helpful for making process that's easy to see and keeps goals obtainable.

Yooooo I feel you there. I love seeing how artist are able to use layer modes to impact the feel of a page, but it doesn't work the same for all styles for sure. That's something I want to play with more, but haven't had much luck so far, but there are tons of more things to consider that i can play with and see how it looks when it comes to that though. Yeah, if somethings confusing, start from the basics, that's pretty good advice to follow.

I see exactly what you mean for your character designs at the bottom. They all look like they come from the same world! Though they all have different colors, they have that unifying coolness about them that brings them together in a line up (also baller shoe designs) so your color exercises are definitely showing through! :purple_heart: (defiantly and definitely are just two of my many English grammar banes).

Thanks for sharing!!

You have a fantastic grip on working with a limited color palette that works for you and not against you! I love how in synch and well planned out your work looks from sticking to a limited palette where all the colors compliment each other. You ain't lying about how too many colors can overwhelm and cause one to take way more time than they have to complete a comic lol.

I love the control you exercise in your colors and yet it doesn't limit any of the emotion or atmospheric shifts in your work. Yeah painterly comics are gorgeous to behold. I freaking love Fiona Staples approach to digital painting when making the art for the Saga comic, but Yowza is that a level of color and form mastery something to marvel at. Painting and blending without making mud is that looming fear DX!

Thanks for sharing examples of your work and jus how much can be achieved through limiting your color choices :purple_heart:

That’s what’s up!! I know about that trouble with Grayscale. Like the most limited color palette there is and yet the shifts in contrast and values can totally make or break work done in black white and gray D:. I do love how in your comic Netvor, color is used to convey something important happening or a shift from the normal that’s done in grayscale. Clever A-F!

Yasssss I’m all about that!! Tools that make doing comics easier on us and fits with our styles is my jam!! I drag and drop my colors in Procreate by setting my line layer to reference and making sure I don’t have gaps in the line work. That lets me lay down flat colors pretty easy. I then use a brush to do my bubbly highlights and shadows. For any spots that were missed by the color fill I make a layer under the base and fill it in :D!

Ty for your insights Roses!!
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The base colors all the remain the same and the colors I change are the ones in the multiply (shading) and Overlay (lighting) layers. Changing and constantly color picking base colors is time consuming and I only do it when I'm not getting the desired effect from the below technique and even when I do I just adjust the colors in the different color adjustment settings.

I had the process for this panel already saved to show a friend so I just added some notes to it, (hope you understand my handwriting lmao) but yeah my process is super simple mainly because I just can't spend that much time rendering, i love working more painterly too but it's not realistic for my comic.



Many of my comic episodes a scene based, so like every scene is an episode and I try to keep the color palette consistent throughout the scene and having the multiply + Overlay colors consistent really helps with that.

I made this ages ago but I think it's a good example of how different Mutiply/Overlay combos look (the base colors is the same in all of them):

It's just really simple and versatile, I often find myself being bored if the scene I'm drawing is in a well-lit room, like no dramatic shadows lol.

Thank you so much! Great suggestions! I can picture very well how adding more darkness in the corner in the fireplace panel could make everything more unified. It would also be good both for realism and composition of the panel itself.

This is such a nice thing to hear :slight_smile:
Thank you!

Ahhhh :heart_01: Ty for breaking it down into steps! I can read your writing just fine, I've seen far worse (mine lol).

Totally makes sense where you're coming from with the scene lighting too!

Gorgeous work and lovely examples. I really love the dramatic shift a shadow/light source can make,

I love talking about color and seeing what others do! I personally lean towards red color palettes myself because my story is dark and industrial. Red just feels correct.


...But I also really love color palettes that lean towards intense, deep blue feat. the sky or ocean!


...So yeah, I pick colors based on the mood of the scene! Simple but effective in my own art.

That cityscape painting is such mood. It's industrial, fast-paced, and you just know there is something going on that just ain't right. You can feel it in your bones. They are beautiful paintings and the contrast between the red and blue combined with the subject matter is such a shift in feeling and so dang neat.

Thank you for sharing!!
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I love vibrant colors! That's why I usually pick mostly saturated hues for both coloring and shading. When it comes to shading I tend to use cyan at full saturation cause it leads to quite beautiful contrasts, specially when the characters have a warmer palette overall.


If cyan doesn't work too well with the piece I resort to either magenta or yellow, always lowering the opacity if it's the first.

Then I always take a lighter color and add highlights with a pencil like brush and the add layer mode. It really makes the details pop :yellow_heart:

Yasss I love the vibrancy in your color selections and the overlay of cool shadows or warm tones that have a hue to them depending on the colors present in each composition!

Totally feeling that method for highlighting details. Really brings depth to that cute sweater! I'm totally digging your character designs too. Lovely work :purple_heart: