5/19/2023 0 Comments Artrage 5 tutorials![]() ![]() These tutorials were created by artist Barbara Lietzow, in cooperation with Wacom and Ambient Design, using the Wacom Intuos Draw graphics tablet. ArtRage Lite Introductory Painting Tutorials ArtRage Lite owners can upgrade to the advanced features of ArtRage 6 at a 30% discount, so you’ll never outgrow your painting software. Wacom selected ArtRage Lite to be included with their new Intuos Draw graphics tablet, as the perfect painting and drawing software for beginners. The following videos show you how to create an image, demonstrate the main real media tools in the program and include plenty of art tips for beginners. Learn how to start painting, drawing and inking with the watercolours, oils, pencils, and other tools in ArtRage Lite. The Wacom Intuos Draw comes with ArtRage Lite Overall, Clip Studio just feels more professional to me…the other two seem stripped down by comparison.Get started with ArtRage Lite using Wacom’s Intuos Draw video tutorials With subtitles in German and English. Lagginess was a deal breaker for me on both ArtRage and Sketchbook - I did testing with all three on a 3300 x 4200 pixel canvas size (11″ x 14″ at 300 dpi resolution). Most importantly, Clip Studio can keep up with rapid sketching at high resolution without lagging. I also downloaded and tested ArtRage 5 and Autodesk Sketchbook Pro, but ultimately chose Clip Studio Paint for its depth of features…such as finer control of taper on both ends of strokes, and amazing vector capabilities, without it looking like vector work: no scanning or photography required lossless full resolution, ready to print can rotate the drawing this way and that (for easier cross-hatching, for example) Drawing taken from one of my coloring books. can handle high resolution drawing/painting for gallery quality prints up to 17 x 22 (biggest we can print ourselves) This tutorial shows the basics of painting with ArtRage with a focus on layers, some blending tips, blending modes and canvas settings. more relaxing since everything I did was an “experiment” which wouldn’t mess up what I’d done so far if I decided I didn’t like it ![]() ability to reposition/resize without erasing then re-drawing (one of the things that was off-putting when I used to paint portraits if a perfectly good eye was a smidge out of place, there was no choice but to paint it out and re-do it!) can work large without smudging from hand on paper darken/lighten individual strokes, a section, or entire drawing easily (using vector layers) ability to place various parts on different layers ![]() natural/realistic look and feel of the various pencil tools It was fun! I feel a little sad that I enjoyed it more than conventional pencil on paper, but I’m also excited by the fresh possibilities of going digital. I didn’t set out with the intention of compositing them together…or any intention, really, I was just trying to figure out how to use new software ( Clip Studio Paint, aka Manga Studio, Mac desktop version, using Intuous4 PTK-440 Wacom tablet), settle on what resolution to use, try out the various pencil tools, and so on. I found it more relaxing - more right brain less left brain - to do it that way. It’s frankensteined together from three separate sketches: one for each eye, and one for nose/mouth: (Would you have known it was drawn using a stylus instead of on paper if I hadn’t said anything?) This sketch is a step along that path, a step that may represent a fork in the path actually, toward digital media rather than pencil on paper: I’ve missed some days, but am definitely drawing a lot more, and enjoying the process.
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