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Setting up GIMP for artistic work

#101 User is offline   elfdaughter 

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Posted 03 September 2007 - 09:17 AM

This is probably the best tutorial I've come across yet. I was a Gimp user, but went over to Photoshop for a while. Now I'm back to Gimp, and trying to re-learn everything! Certaintly, this is the first time using gimp with a tablet, so those tips you gave will be very useful. The one thing that annoyed me when I started back on Gimp was the lack of an easily-changed brush size. I'm so pleased to see that it is actually possible!!
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#102 User is offline   dr-fish 

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Posted 04 September 2007 - 10:46 AM

Here's what i came up with: Posted Image

I could have added more branches if i had time!
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#103 User is online   Griatch 

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Posted 05 September 2007 - 07:53 PM

@elfdaughter

Welcome to GIMPtalk (and welcome back to GIMP ;-) .

I'm glad you liked the tutorial! GIMP works very well with a tablet, you'll have a lot of fun with it. The resizeable brushes are almost critical to artistic work I think. You'll find them a requirement for essentially all of my own tutorials at least.


@dr-fish

Thanks for trying out the tutorial! It's a nice result, you have blended the colours nicely together forming a smooth continuous trunk, while also letting the background work for you in the sense of having it "shine through" and affect the colours here and there. The lack of many branches is not a problem but possibly you could have been a little more patient with the outermost, thinnest branches, you could have extended these a little more and made them look more like actual branches. Overall it's well done though.

Good job! I'm putting your image up at the top post. :-)
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#104 User is offline   o88752 

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Posted 19 September 2007 - 01:54 PM

Posted Image


Verry disapointed in myself i see everybody elses and mine looks like poo. :(
Posted Image
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#105 User is offline   hollisterpolak 

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Posted 22 September 2007 - 03:58 AM

i need posts
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#106 User is online   Griatch 

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Posted 02 October 2007 - 12:49 PM

@holisterpollak

Well, that's not the way to get posts. Post something useful or don't post at all.

@o88752

It's a nice start. What you need to work on is form and learn to apply the airbrush over the same area multiple times for a stronger contrast. If you follow the tutorial you will also learn to make longer, continuous lines in one stroke, that will help you a lot when doing the tree trunk. Try it a few times, don't give up. If you'd supply me with a thumbnail I'll put your work up at the top "hall of fame". :-)
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#107 User is offline   FSX 

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Posted 12 October 2007 - 04:30 PM

This is my try ^^:

Posted Image
Posted Image
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#108 User is online   Griatch 

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Posted 16 October 2007 - 09:56 AM

@FSX

That's a really nice tree! You have good control over the brush and have worked well with the branches, it looks quite realistic. I have very little critique to give on this one, possibly you could try even more shadowing (to enhance contrast and make it clear where light is coming from) as well as adding finer structure on the trunk with a thin brush. But that's for another tutorial. Good one! I'm linking this from the top. :-)
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#109 User is offline   Jake30502 

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Posted 18 October 2007 - 12:13 PM

Posted Image

^Mine... I know it needs much more shading on the trunk but it's not a bad start... Is it?
Posted Image
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#110 User is offline   vivaldiscool 

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Posted 24 October 2007 - 03:56 AM

Wonderful tutorial, it gives gimp a whole other aspect other then just "sigging". Here's my result (though I cant say I didn't use erase a couple of times. :a: ,at least I forced my self not to use shif/click )
Posted Image
Posted Image
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#111 User is offline   tjustleft 

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Posted 25 October 2007 - 05:43 AM

Hello Griatch,

I found your tutorial on resizable brushes and for now I have two. One solid round and one soft round. Thanks for that.

I would like to know if there is a way to do this with user created brushes. I am attempting to make a brush with a few squiggly lines to use for a HAIR brush. I have a picture of my wife from which I removed her from the background. On one side her hair blended in with the pattern behind her and not all of it could be selected. I need to make the brush resizable to go back and touch up the hair. The only brushes I can make that will resize are done like those in your tutorial. Also the lines I do have only paint as gray.

Do you have any suggestions?

Thank you.
Be self-controlled and alert. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour.
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#112 User is offline   vivaldiscool 

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Posted 30 October 2007 - 01:10 AM

hmmm, I know that you've said it somewere before, but what tablet do you use?
Posted Image
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#113 User is online   Griatch 

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Posted 31 October 2007 - 02:27 AM

@vivaldiscool

Nice! You have tried some variation to the colour theme, and I think the white highlights works well, gives a good feeling of structure. The shadow is also a nice touch, although I think there might be something off with its perspective; it looks very long considering its angle. You have good use of the brush and smudge/blur and whereas you could have sharpened out the roots a bit more, as well as tried a smaller brush on the outermost branches, I think it came out very well. Good job! I'm linking this from the top post. :-) Oh, and I use an Wacom Intuous 3 for most of my work. Not for this tutorial though, that was done with a mouse.

@tjustleft

What you suggest is a rescalable picture-brush. This is not possible in the stable 2.2 series of GIMP -- only procedural brushes (i.e. those you make in the brush editor as shown in the tutorial) will rescale. However, in the newly-released version 2.4 it's possible, using the scaling feature -- there you can scale up and down any brush regardless of how you made it. :-)
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#114 User is offline   PhotoComix 

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Posted 31 October 2007 - 08:34 PM

@Griatch tjjustleft

Maybe the question is if is possible to assign a key to that rescale slider to resize even more on the fly,without stop painting

Anyway size is not all...only procedural brush may be blurred rotated or angled
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#115 User is online   Griatch 

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Posted 31 October 2007 - 11:44 PM

@Photocomix

You can assign a key to the scaling slider just as with the normal brush resize. The shortcut is just not found in the "Context" config menu but in the "Tools" one if I remember correctly. Unfortunately I think you currently have to use two different keys for the "brush resize" and the "brush scale" features however.
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#116 User is offline   PhotoComix 

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Posted 01 November 2007 - 12:56 AM

:h:
Thank ....that preference menu seems created by a big fan of labyrinths, so a clue as "tools" is quite helpful
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#117 User is offline   vivaldiscool 

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Posted 01 November 2007 - 01:59 AM

Quote

Nice! You have tried some variation to the colour theme, and I think the white highlights works well, gives a good feeling of structure. The shadow is also a nice touch, although I think there might be something off with its perspective; it looks very long considering its angle. You have good use of the brush and smudge/blur and whereas you could have sharpened out the roots a bit more, as well as tried a smaller brush on the outermost branches, I think it came out very well. Good job! I'm linking this from the top post. :-).

Thanks :l: , I actually originally did it with blue on pink like you did, but after I finished that, I decided to have some extra fun by colorizing it and adding a background. And thanks alot for your tips with the shadows, twigs,smudging ect...

However, A wacom Intuous?! aren't those the ones they market to professional artists? how big is the screen? ...or did you just happen to fall into a pile of money.? :w: (btw, the stuff you can do with your mouse is incredible. I'm trying to follow your hand tut now :p )
Posted Image
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#118 User is offline   PhotoComix 

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Posted 01 November 2007 - 03:24 AM

Quote

A wacom Intuous?! aren't those the ones they market to professional artists? how big is the screen?


Screen?...You should be a dreamer ..or maybe you make confusion with CINTIQ
http://www.wacom-eur...n21.asp?lang=en

...that is the best and it has a screen even a good one only problem it cost a bit more then a top level desktop

As far i know all other have no screen but just a dull dumb grey board :s:
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#119 User is online   Griatch 

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Posted 01 November 2007 - 09:42 AM

@vivaldiscool

Quote

However, A wacom Intuous?! aren't those the ones they market to professional artists? how big is the screen? ...or did you just happen to fall into a pile of money.? (btw, the stuff you can do with your mouse is incredible. I'm trying to follow your hand tut now :p )


Photocomix is right, you are confusing the Intuous with the Cintiq. Wacom is a tablet manufacturer that makes a wide range of tablets for graphical use. You are correct that the Intuous is the professional-level tablet, but it's just a tablet, not a pressure-sensitive screen like their Cintiq line. In fact, the Intuous is not ridiculously more expensive than the Graphire or Bamboo (which are their "basic" tablets), but it has several features that most users will have little real use for (or at least will definitely not miss). The step from mouse to any tablet is much greater than any switch between tablets later anyway. Hence I usually recommend people to get the excellent quality Graphire tablet, that'll work for years of doing graphics. If my old Graphire wasn't so old it lacked an USB connector I would still use that I reckon.

A Cintiq would be very cool indeed to have, but that's very expensive as you said. Here, it costs much more than a whole new computer. ^_^;

Thanks for the kind words on my works -- looking forward to seeing you try the advanced airbrushing tutorial (the one with the hand). :-)
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#120 User is offline   dr ownage 

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Posted 09 November 2007 - 08:10 AM

hey i gave it a shot it isnt that great tho
EDIT:(here is an updated better vesion of the tree
Posted Image
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