11/13/2022 0 Comments Merge layers in krita![]() ![]() You can get Taleclock's brushes here fav.me/d7yu3dg and their video on blending might be of interest to you, too taleclock.tumblr. (Sometimes I nice results even with "Multiply" for scanned traditional media.) Best blending modes are the ones that make things lighter, especially "Overlay" and "Screen", though depending on the color scheme, "Lighten" might work well, too. The trick might have come from photography, maybe? I think I picked it up from Robaato ) - Merge all layers, make a copy layer for the merged layer, run Gaussian Blur filter over the newly created copy layer with 5 to 9 percent (Krita sets the default to 5% and I am often too lazy to change that), then set the blurred copy layer to a different blending mode with opacity set between 17 and 30 percent. (It is what I do with the majority of images shortly before saving their final/web versions. What I did after I was done with painting mighthave helped to make the colors "pop" as well. I might have airbrushed with low opacity some of the shadow color over bigger areas as well in some places. But since I started using taleclock 's basic blending brush, I started having much easier time. So, what I did was pretty much just the standard paint blending - a technique that I don't feel to have properly mastered yet. If been working on an animatic/animation for the last four days until Krita decided to merge all my layers that had sketches on them. That said, I've read it again and again that smudging is something that shouldn't be done much in digital painting (some artists even say to never ever use it ). Krita has a brush setting for smudge-like actions, and I think the default brush pack that comes with it includes some brush presets that have different smudges as well (one that I like makes paint "jitter", so to say). ![]()
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