| Aloha all,
eric here with a lil tutorial for you. This lil' thing is
all about colouring and shading your work in Photoshop. I'm
writing this believing that you have some idea of your way
around Adobe Photoshop. I'm using 5.5 but I don't really use
anything fancy. Just lines and layers.
If you don't QUITE know
all the shortcuts than here are some you should know:
D - changes your selected
colours back to the default Black and White.
X - Swaps your selected
colours, foreground goes to backround and backround goes to
fore.
ALT +DELETE - fills the
layer or selection with the foreground colour.
CNTRL + DELETE - fills
the layer or selection with the backround colour.
[ and ] - change your brush
size.
ALT while using a drawing
tool - changes to the eye dropper for as long as you hold
ALT.
Before we
get to the computer part of it all, I start by drawing a quick
sketch of what I want. I don't draw it all perfect or ruled
out, I just draw. I try and keep my pencil lines clean and
don't erase too much. Here is the picture that I'm working
with and this is pretty much the same size that I drew it
at. This is a night scene, there is going to be a moon in
the upper left casting light on the telescope and ground.
So we have a sketch, now I scanned this at 100dpi mostly because
I really don't need anything bigger than that. It's best to
scan the drawing bigger than it really is so that you can
add colour and detail easier. It's easier to add detail to
a big drawing and then reduce it than it is to add it to a
small drawing. |
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| I
am going to be doing everything with aliased lines so if you
are going to use a tool that has the option of turning off
anti-aliasing, do it, it makes things easier for reduction
and especially colouring. You'll see what I mean later on.
Open the sketch
in Photoshop and add a layer, let's call it Telescope outline
and choose the pencil tool. Now, with a small brush maybe
a size 3 start to outline the drawing. This is made easier
with the pencil tool mostly because if you click once on the
drawing making a small dot, and then hold shift and click
again in another spot it makes a straight line.

pencil tool
"But there
is a straight line tool already, why don't I use that?" |
| You
can if you want, but I don't like it. It draws lines funny
sometimes, try it, draw a square with the line tool, and then
draw it with the pencil tool and holding shift. The pencil
tool gives you a rounded edge while the straight line tool
is a straight black line everytime, see:

see what I'm saying?
Also, with
the [ ] keys you can change the pencil size quickly instead
of typing in the line weight. |
| Okey
doke, back to drawing, just pick a good part to begin and
well... Begin. Just trace the pencil drawing as best as you
can. Changing line width as you come to smaller lines and
inside detail of the drawing. Try not to go below a size 2
brush, cause when you reduce it the line may get lost. It
also my help to use a different colour like red when drawing
your outline. That makes it easier to see your own line as
opposed to the black pencil line.
Ok, skipping
a bit, we are now finished with the outlining process. It
isn't really that hard so far is it? I hope not. Make another
layer, title it White Backround and fill it with white.
Slip that layer in between the outline and the original pencil
drawing. You should have a wonderfully reproduced outline
of your original. Now hide or delete or whatever the original
pencil drawing cause chances are your not going to need it
again [you'll notice that I left off the fence that was going
to surround the building. This was just a choice I made to
save time]. |
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