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Aug 2022

Hi,

I’m starting to learn how to ink since I’m interested in creating a new webcomic. While I was on the internet, I found these references that I really like, and I’ve tried to recreate the style to no avail. I wanted to know if someone knew what brushes in Krita could recreate this inking style?

Thank you for your time,
L'aTor

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    Aug '22
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    Sep '22
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This just looks like your standard round brush to me. I don't even see any texture applied. Judging by the strokes they have pressure-controlled tip size on, and maybe some pressure-controlled flow/opacity.

What makes these drawings great is how the artist draws their lines, not the brush they're using. They've got loose quick strokes, and a firm understanding of the fundamentals, like form and movement. They're also good at not overthinking what they're doing, and that results in a pleasant looking flow to their work.
I hate to say it, but no brush in the world will give you a look like this. Getting your work to look like this requires many years of training and hard work.

it could be a marker or a square brush, those tend to have this kind of size variation - I don't use krita so I wouldn't be able to tell you but it's not particularly textured so I don't think it's all that special - if you want to get this effect then you should experement with pen pressure to see what you can come up with.

Thank you for your help and time! I'll work hard to be able to achieve a similar and hopefully a great comic. I'll be experimenting and trying different things.

Thank you to you both!

At first glance this seems to be the average ol' classic round brush to me.

What I seem to notice is that there are a lot of plays of lines and solid usage of black shadows and high-contrast. At the same time that there are quite the change of the brush size to make details and other things.

But with further detail, it seems that the brush may have a bit of a specific setting since in certain areas the "dark" areas are not as dark, there seems to have a little bit of texture and opacity feature to it. Of course, while there seems to be a tiny bit of texture in the brush, great part of the inking technique resides on the usage of short lines. So I would recommend practicing a bit the short line technique and probably a marker brush to have a bit of that "ink discharge" effect.

Thank you @RedLenai for your help, but I'm a little confused on the short line technique. Do you that each stroke is actually a short, quick line that you later go over to darken it or connect it to another short line, like feathering the line rather than in one stroke?

I'm having a bit of an issue with finding an "ink discharge" brush in Krita, could you recommend one, if you know of a brush that could get a similar effect?

Also, what specific setting do you believe the brush has? The opacity is still dark but slightly different, which I'm having a hard time recreating.

Thank you for your time and help.

I believe so, especially in this area.

Sadly I do not use Krita, neither I know how to modify settings on it. I believe the best way to mimick the ink discharge would be to try to go to the brush settings, and lower the opacity of the brush. I have a brush that has a bit of a similar result on Clip Studio, so by analyzing it. There seems to be less opacity on the brush's ends and a bit of a spaced classic circle brush, the pure black concentrating in the center.

I've tried recreating a bit the style with the brush that I believe is the closets to what we're looking for, but I still won't know. I believe this one has a little bit of "transparency" compared to the one you're looking

Your welcome! To be honest, you made a very close replica of said brush. I believe that with a few tweaks you can even have a better result, but hey no need to rush!

1 month later

closed Sep 7, '22

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