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Jul 2021

wacom intuos small since it was cheapest and i'm really comfy with using the pen tablet models. i kinda wanna experiment with screen tabs or an ipad in the future or whenever/if ever i manage to have the finances for one

and medibang paint (my beloved) because it's free, it lets me do everything in one software between drawing, effects, lettering and panels and the cloud brushes as well as the ability to make my own. i have csp which i got on sale but it's been setting collecting dust on my computer (it's ui makes my head hurt)

I've been using a Cintiq 16 for a few years. It took me a long time to get the money but I love it.

For programs, I've tried a lot, but after I used csp I never left. I've been trying to learn to use procreate on my iPad since it's more portable but it's so confusing for me to use. I wish csp on ipad wasn't paid on monthly subscription.

I use Huion Kamvas pro 12. I love it but I find it too small, i do want huion kamvas 16, its the perfect size.
I use clip studio paint.

wow wasn't expecting all the huions! i use a wacom intuos, a massive upgrade from two years ago that replaced my previous $50 budget tablet. for programs, i love clip studio paint, have used them since i was a kid and they went by manga studio, same serial number and everything.

I don't have a tablet yet, but I'm trying to get one soon (granted, I draw stick figure, soooo... yeah, not much need for detail here). I'd go for a Huion too. My sister has a 16 Pro she uses in Architecture. As a program I use Affinity Designer. I got the free trial at the beginning of the pandemic and fell in love with it (and it's also a one time payment). Anyway, here is the result:

Software:
Clipstudio and Photoshop (they do suck my blood).

Tools:
Wacom One Display tablet
Iphone to take selfies as I am a work of art....... jk. I don't draw on phone.

Where are my Krita folks at?! Krita users, assemble! :boom:

Okay, so... I use Krita, the thing that crashes all the time, because I like the interface and I'm used to it. Also, a Wacom intuos pro that I got a few years back after upgrading my previous wacom. I can't complain, once you're past the installing process and bugs it works super nicely :smiley:

As for the process, I sketch on pc, I ink, I flat color, I shade. Then I crop each panel and assemble them on the page. I found some nice style that's not too complicated to reproduce and work fast with, so I'm happy.

I do all my sketching, inks, lettering on paper because I’ve never ever managed to match the speed and control I have traditionally with a tablet. Years and years of trying and it just never got to that point. I also had to embrace the fact that my work just looked more polished when I work traditionally. I don’t think I could work full time in comics the way I do now if I was still trying to bust my butt on a tablet.

Then I scan em and drop out the pencil lines and level the pages on an old version of Photoshop (to make the blacks black and the whites white instead of that dusty scanned look) and then I just do my flats. I think almost all of my comics are just flats. I don’t like looking at screens for too long so I try not to spend a lot of time on the digital aspects of my work. I’m actually just about to hire someone to drop in my pre-determined colors.

Oh, and the tablet I use is an older Cintiq. Everything I use is old; my computer, my tablet, my version of Photoshop. I’ve never ever understood the obsession with getting the newest everything if the old stuff still works and isn’t lagging or inconveniencing somehow. Even now where I’m financially stable enough to buy new stuff I tend to use things until they become develop a problem which usually means I use the same tool for a decade+. :sweat_smile:

I use a Wacom Bamboo tablet (CTH-461) and Krita for my digital stuff.

These were the only two things available to me that I didn't have to spend any money on. The tablet was sitting in a cupboard gathering dust because the original owner didn't have any use for it anymore so I decided to just take it for myself.
Why waste the opportunity?!

I mainly use CSP EX with my cintiq 13 and ipad (ipad is so handy if i wanna work on the comic while socializing)

I'm sure many have said over n over how useful csp tools are and those user made that really speed up the process for me.

How do you like your Wacom One? I was looking at one the other day as a transition into drawing on a screened tablet as opposed to the slate-style tablets I've been using, but while I've heard a lot of people talking about Cintiqs and XP Pens and Kamvas, I haven't known anyone who used a Wacom One.

Softwares:

PC - Photoshop
Phone - Artflow (I use this to work on my comic on my way to work inside the skytrain or sometimes at work)

Hardwares:

Wacom Bamboo (Bought this baby back in 2009.
Google Pixel 3

Software:
FireAlpaca for drawing and Paint.NET for doing minor edits.

Hardware:
Monoprice tablet. I had this for almost a decade now, and it's definitely not as fancy as Wacom's tablets or an iPad, but it does its job

I use Krita (and no it doesn't crash, it works just fine for me) and a Huion Inspiroy h640p, which is a pretty affordable medium-sized pad tablet with a battery free pen and a fairly smooth surface (which I like). That's pretty much all I use. I have Clip Studio Paint installed as well and plan to learn how to use it for lettering because Krita's text tool is a bit lacking, and when my tablet breaks I'll probably replace it with a newer one from the Inspiroy series with tilt support but besides that I'm very happy with what I have. I've been using Krita for over a year now and found the perfect settings for me, I love its brushes (especially the blending tool), and I'm very familiar with my little tablet.

My tools have changed just this year, so I can speak to both phases of my work.

The first wave is how I've done it since 2016 (when I decided to start drawing more often). Draw it traditionally, then scan it, make some digital edits and color the traditional piece via Sketchbook Pro. Eventually, I got a simple screen-less Wacom Tablet, so I decided to start adding in a proper digital step. Draw the pencil drafts traditionally, scan them onto my desktop, line art and color digitally. This would be my process from 2018 on.

First Wave Tools:
Pencils and Micron Pens
Paper
Scanner
Sketchbook Pro
Wacom Tablet (eventually)

The second wave hits this year, once I decided to spoil myself with a Galaxy Tab S7 (that and I felt the process I've been working with was too slow and I was not comfortable drawing on something I could see the drawing on. Price was decent too). I needed a screen and man did that increase productivity. Same process only I took photos of the traditional images rather than scan it. 3 months back, I decided to cut the traditional part completely out of production. So my tool list now is:

Galaxy Tab S7
Sketchbook Pro (for drafts, line art, color and tones) (on desktop)
Clip Studio Paint (for text, formatting and additional effects) (on tablet)
Scrap Paper (for storyboards, drafts, concept brainstorming, jotting down ideas, quick references and notes)
Dropbox (moving files from Tablet to PC

Pretty much what I could afford. Sketchbook and Dropbox are free, Clip Studio is worth the price in spades, been using it over a year and I haven't even scratched the surface. Screen Tablet was the right investment for me.

I'm using photoshop. and clip studio paint ( only for the rulers that allow to make speedlines lol)
Maya ( 3D software) and Unreal Engine. with lots of free content and the option to screencap render passes it allows me to get all sorts of backgrounds and adjust camera fov for more control.

It was my first drawing tablet ever and I am loving it honestly. I have no complaint whatsoever.
I chose this because it was a cheaper display tablet option compared to other Wacom display tablets.
Size is 13,3" (1920x1080), not the biggest but it works perfectly great.
I have had this product for one whole year and I draw on it for at least 7 hours everyday. Sometimes longer.
Never broke. Never had an error. Amazing so far.

I only needed to buy a small laptop support like this to support the tablet. Picture below.

Summary

And now I can draw on my tablet almost vertically. It's so good for my posture.

At the begginign, it was all analog tools (paper, pen, brushes, ink, etc), only the company or the newspaoper I worked with had scanner back then and they printed everything.

later, I had my first pc and camera to do mixed media (take a pic of the drawing and work on it with PS or openCanvas and mouse)
Later, in a new job i bought my first second hand wacom (this model1) and still was doing mixed media for a while till I managed to get more art programs or play with digital only. But the pen was broken XD so all the time I fought with really crappy lines.
Then finally I could get my dreamed wacom cintiq 13 (yeah it wasnt easy to get one in my country back then) so Im still taking care of it like a treasure xD Im still using PS, but now also using SAI, CSP (othres I use for fun are MyPaint, OpenCanvas, Medibang), yeah I have my scanner.

I started out traditional. Tried a pen tablet, but it was way too hard to use, so I sold it. I got a wacom with a montior, but it always had a lot of problems, so I sold that too. I currently use an iPad Pro and Procreate.

I like the iPad Pro because it's portable, doesn't need to be attached to a computer, has decent battery life, the colors display well, it's light weight, and there is no lag with the Pencil.

I like Procreate because it's simple to use, the buttons don't take up the whole screen, it has simple time lapse recording, and is a one time purchase.

The drawbacks are...
- when I do split screen to bring up references, the screen feels kinda small
- file sizes/layers are limited
- have to use my phone to play background music on YouTube
- have to draw comic panels and balloons by hand
- takes longer to do text
- have to transfer files to my laptop to upload/backup