11 / 40
Sep 2020

I changed my lineart to a looser/less detailed style to draw it faster, I'm glad I decided to do it because enjoying drawing it way more!

Here's my first page and the page I'm currently working on:


You can actually see the difference in my lineart from the beginning of my comic to the end of it because for a long time I was only doing flat colors so I put all of my effort to learning to do as much with line and blacks as I could. If you want to go back further A long while ago I had a webcomic called 3 Wishes on smackjeeves which was mostly before I had a cintiq and before I could really do some nicer line work. But it was also before I really had the ability to so it really wouldn't matter much. For a long time during that I did this time consuming pen tool fill method in photoshop. It was clean and sort of feigned some amount of line variance but it was mostly vector style line art. It evolved over my time on 3 Wishes but jesus it took forever to do and I really don't care for the way it looks anymore anyway.

3 Wishes in case you're curious about some of my old work and the way that line art looked.

And here is my current work

Yes and I perfectly understand now! It was frustrating for me at first, but once I got into it, it became quite the fun task.
Your lineart looks perfectly smooth and the drawing looks clear and understandable. Hope I'll become this good one day!

Thank you! It looks like you've gained quite a bit more control over your lines in the recent pic! Looking really good!

Line art always feel satisfying to me because when done right it can really be expressive.

Here is my old line art in my old webcomic When Cats Rule the World. It was...a work in progress :sweat_02:.

And here's my line art for my current comic Life's Lemonade. I've been experimenting, so I have some line art options to choose from.

And here's my comic!

The artstyle feels so... different and improved. The first one looks cute but a bit basic, while the second one looks more abstract and charming. Very nice job!

Well that's some difference right there! You used to only make straight thin lines all the way but I see you're now working with more dynamic lines that get thinner or thicker depending on the spots you're drawing.
I'm curious about one thing though, why did you make newer versions of your comic?

It's interesting to see how different the series are and how much you've improved artistically and story-wise.

Inking is my favorite part!

Reminds me of another "artist". Why do people still draw in Paint today? There are open source vector drawing programs that can compete with Adobe Illustrator. And Gimp, which is just a free PS...

You know the old saying "if you can't say something nice, don't say anything at all"? Looking at your post history you could stand to practice that more often.

AmazementComics, keep on doing whatever you wanna do in the program you wanna do it! (Oh, and check out the creator of Living When Dead, who does amazing stuff with MSPaint.)