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Nov 2018

I tried using Sai's trial ver at some point but whenever I opened it, my tablet would stop responding. Pen pressure disables, cursor wouldn't move, stuff like that. Still don't know what makes it does that.

I draw everything in SAI and add the text and effects in Photoshop. It's slightly annoying sometimes so I am considering switching to Clip Studio one of these days, just not yet.

I've seen Krita a lot, heard that it's "not good for my kind of linearting". Wouldn't hurt to test Krita and relearn Medi though.

I used to hate doing lineart on Krita because it uses the realistic brushes and focused a lot on painting style so it was hard to make it not look sketchy unless you could make your lines super smooth anyway. You either had to embrace the more "raw and sketchy" feel or practice lots. Until someone pointed out there's a reasonably new dynamic brush setting that cleans up lines for you as you go and several filters that will clean up lineart. It's definitely improved for lineart a lot in the few years I've been using it.

I'll look out for that then! Since my artwork is formed by thick and solid lines, brush/sketchy lines aren't really for me.

I use Firealpaca too, I'm pretty happy with it, at least until now :smile:

Hubby uses Photoshop CC. He's set up several things that allow for ease of use, like a present "comic" size layout

I use Photoshop CC from start to finish. I'm not sure that's the best way to do it, but that's what I use.

Also on Photoshop, using CS5 from a school license. I need to upgrade so bad but ugh, that price tag over the course of a couple years is INTENSE against the gains.

I tried Clip Studio and Sai a few years back and those are good alternatives. Clip Studio is especially neat 'cause of it's range.

For page layout, I've been using a second-hand copy of Manga Studio 4 Debut for the past 5 years along with Photoshop CS5 for coloring. Krita and Medibang Paint are pretty good if you're looking for free programs. Medibang even has a comic panel slicing tool built in.

I've been using Photoshop for 15 years now for drawing. Just like you, I know it very well now and even though it's not geared towards comics, I can easily make it work for that.

Clip Studio is most excellent.

I'm not the most tech savvy guy in the world but it makes it easy.

I really want to use CSP with its full capailities but my humble pc can't handle too much of it. And I've been using SAI for years now that I think there's nothing better than SAI when it comes to linearting, and it doesn't eat that much ram space. But it's such a pain to switch to csp/photoshop just to edit text and effects! I need to save money to get better pc ;__;

I used Krita for some time and I find it quite good and comfortable to use while remaining free, but it struggles (at least on my computer) when using certain tools, such as text.
I recently switched to Clip Studio and, while I'm still figuring out how to use it properly, I find it's easier to use for drawing and has a really nice set of tools specifically designed for comic creation.

I use Autodesk SketchBook for drawing; comes with lots of brushes, a very easy to use perspective tool, and you don't need to use a mouse. Then I color in Photoshop, although I'm not good at coloring and haven't explored other options yet. Finally, I format the pages and do speech bubbles in Clip Studio Paint.

I use Photoshop CS6 for making the actual pages and every stage except the line-inking stage. I actually use Fire alpaca for my linearting since it's free and it's really good at that clean bold lineart (and I've sadly not taken the time to bother with Sai). But everything else, from sizing the pages, making the panels and speech bubbles, to specail fx's...all photoshop.

Photoshop elements 6 came with one of my tablets in 2008, and I've been using it ever since XD

Since most of my work is traditionally drawn, I have to scan the pages. From there, I use Comic Life for lettering. Then I use Paint to get the pages down to Tapas-friendly sizes.

I use MediBang Paint Pro, which I really recommend since its free and its similar to FireAlpaca but it has some settings and stuff that are helpful for making comics (especially manga style).
I also use PaintStorm Studio for painting but its not free.