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Published: 2011-03-04 18:34:14 +0000 UTC; Views: 14911; Favourites: 308; Downloads: 342
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Description
Jamie Hewlett's Tank Girl. And Jiro Matsumoto's Becchin. And my wife. On a tank.So I prefer working in pencil to ink, but I really like using zip tone. And it looks wonky on pencil work. So I'm trying to use this texture I made with a graphite stick as a zip tone.
Thoughts on that?
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Comments: 10
juntaro [2012-02-28 15:21:36 +0000 UTC]
This works perfectly, and I think you could still get away with using large-dotted zipatone just for grungy textures in the shadows, perhaps.
And Jiro Matsumoto is my favorite Matsumoto -- so good.
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JakeWyatt In reply to juntaro [2012-02-28 21:37:53 +0000 UTC]
Yeah, I've been meaning to revisit this process for a while. Thanks for the zip-tone idea! I'm gonna give that a shot next time I get some free time.
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CheiftainMaelgwyn [2011-03-05 07:00:59 +0000 UTC]
Looks good man.
I like that it's similar to tone, but fits better with the pencil lines. I've never seen anything like it before and it rocks.
Also I like that Kat's there. *waves*
Also those shoes. That perspective. I freakin' dig this.
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Kobb [2011-03-04 20:40:40 +0000 UTC]
I buy it. Goes great with your very pencil-textured lines.
Did you make a page-sized texture sample and then mask it?
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
JakeWyatt In reply to Kobb [2011-03-04 22:14:07 +0000 UTC]
Kind of. I made a page-sized texture, knocked out all the white in channels, and then cut in and out of it with my eraser, like normal zip-o-tone. To change the value, I locked the transparency and painted onto it. It's a quick way to work, and I think I'ma do it again.
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