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Apr 2019

Hello, all.

I have to make the confession that I am a total noob when it comes to creating my art digitally. I have both Medibang and Krita in my repertoire. I also have this thing called Imagink, which came with my Slate 2. The Slate 2 allows me, for those who do not have it, to basically draw what I want on paper and that will be instantly translated digitally. For me, it's almost works like a dream.

I am also heavily influenced by the thick outline style ala Dexter's Laboratory. I have been experimenting both Medibang and Krita, but I do not know exactly to get the desired cartoony effect I'm looking for.

Help a noob out, would ya? =)

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    Apr '19
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    Apr '19
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Any chance you can post some pictures of your art so we can look at it and get a better idea of the direction you need to go in?

I believe in krita there is an option called "bezier curves" and that should help you as most illustrators (
including myself in chibis) use it to get that effect. Just play around with the settings and find what works for you :slight_smile:

Hey there! I'm also personally influenced by western animation in my work. I use a combination of Paint Tool Sai 2.0 and Photoshop. You can see some of the art I've made with it here:

Paint tool Sai 2.0 has a stabilizer that you can activate, which is helpful for me, although it certainly isn't for everyone. It essentially "corrects" shaky lineart and gives that smooth, digital feeling, which a lot of cartoons have and have had in the past. I like it better than pen tool in Sai and Photoshop, although that can work as well for this. Stabilizer feels more organic since it's a free handing technique, while pen tool is not.

Sometimes the exterior lineart isn't as thick as I wanted it to look, and for that I use Photoshop. Photoshop has a "stroke" feature, which is particularly useful with transparent png images. While it isn't always as precise as I would like, it can have some great results depending on the image.

This is an image that I corrected with Photoshop's stroke. The lineart around the character was something that I wanted to be thicker than the lineart on the interior of the character, but I hadn't made it that way initially. I think the difference is nice, however!

Howdy! Medibang user here~

So like @fnflgbtcomics mentioned a stabillizer can help a great deal when it comes to line art and medibang offers this as well. if you're using the desktop version it ought to show up right at the top and you can adjust it to a point you're comfy with. I usually keep it around 10 or 11 and it gives smooth enough lines.

as for the thick outline the closest medibang has to photoshop's stroke tool would be "draw selection border" which is an option under the select menu button on the top bar. once you click it you can choose "round corners maintain thickness" and whether you want it inside, outside or on the boundary of the selection

as with most things it'll take some trial and error to find what works for you but with practice you'll definitely figure it out

Whichever you consider being your style right now should work! That way I can give you more accurate advice :slight_smile:

I know that I'm only a beginner. If these are a little too kiddy, please let me know so I can figure out how to spice them up.