Great question! When youâre starting to work in digital art, layers can be incredibly confusing to start out with. They seem almost like magic⊠but what are they, really?
Personally I also work in Medibang, so I think these screenshots will be helpful.
To begin with, letâs take this picture of a zebra I drew a little while ago:
It seems like thereâs a LOT going on here. But actually, layers make it easier than ever to make your drawings feel nice and clean digitally. Lots of programs also have specialized tools to help you color effortlessly – and itâs VERY different from the traditional method of being careful to not color outside the lines.
First of all, letâs take a look at layers. What ARE layers? They are⊠well⊠a way to organize your art, for a start. Anything on the top layer will be BOSS and will (generally) be on top of everything else. Thatâs why most artists use the top layer for lineart, as you yourself said.Â
Artists can use SO MANY LAYERS. Like, some artists use 100+ layers in one piece. But thatâs a lot, so letâs start with⊠3. Just 3 simple layers. For exampleâŠ
Now, letâs say you have this lineart and you want to color it. The color will go on the bottom, so that it doesnât interfere with the lineart layer. But how do you color it? Well, you COULD do the very slow and tedious process of going over it bit by bit.Â
But thatâs honestly very tedious and no one actually likes it. It leaves a lot of room for error, and it takes forEVER.
Instead, letâs make this easier.
HOW TO COLOR USING THE SELECT TOOL!
First of all, this requires that your lineart not have gaps. That means all black lines are connected.Â
Second, letâs go to our color layer and make sure itâs selected (and not the lineart layer)
Next, use the magic select tool on the left hand side. It looks like a little magic wand.
Click on the empty space you WANT to color. In my case, itâll be the scarf area. Medbang will sense the area based on the visible lineart layer, even though you are still technically on the color layer.
(you can select multiple areas, like the two little ends of the scarf, by holding down the Shift key and clicking those areas)
The next bit is a bit more technical.
With these parts selected, you COULD just use the bucket tool and fill everything in. BUT, with the way digital programs work, you might end up with a VEEEERY thin layer of white between your lineart and your colors.
So what I (and a lot of artists) do instead is manually expand that selected area by just a few pixels to make sure that border is caught in the all-encompassing COLOR CONQUEST.Â
To do this, just go upstairs to the âselectâ menu and click âexpandâ. Give it a few pixels, hit enter, and THEN use a filling technique of choice. I just throw a large square over the area.Â
Now, I know what youâre thinking. âokay, I have the flat colors. But what if I need to add details, like shading and patterns?â
Let me introduce you to our friendâŠ. CLIPPING!
What is clipping? I thought you might ask. Well, consider this scenario. You have your color layer, your lineart layer – and between them – your shading layer. You want to shade stuff, but again, you might have to go through and color things bit by bit so as to make sure nothing goes outside of the lineart.Â
BUT look there! Whatâs that checkbox up at the top? Itâs a bird! Itâs a plane! ItâsâŠ. CLIPPING!
Go ahead and check that box – and it will trap your Shading layer in a prisonâŠ. a prison of the color layer!
Basically, clipping means you lock the layer onto the layer directly underneath it, and the shading will ONLY affect whatever exists below it. If you didnât color outside the lines⊠the shading will also not cross that border.
Voila!
Now, layers are MUCH much more than this. We could probably have an entire class just about layers. However, I recommend just playing around and discovering as much as you can on your own. Digital art is a lot of fun, and opens many doors. You can allow layers to interact with each other in many crazy ways – thereâs settings like âLightenâ and âMultiplyâ and âOverlayâ that all have different functions and allow you to play with colors quickly and easily for your art.Â
wow i canât date jk bc who would ask for extra sauce at mcdonaldâs? neither of us so thatâs scrapped
meanwhile if you go with tae heâs ordering for you making your drink oh hey baby you want some extra mcnapkins? iâll go get it comes back with 10 packets of sweet n sour sauce and 4 extra straws for funsies
yoongi: if you want it you better tell me right now cause iâm not getting back up after i get this tray
namjoon already got your sauce in the bag with his order because he already knew you were gonna ask
jin would just laugh in your face and tell you to get it yourself if you really wanted it and continue eating his food
hobi skips to the counter âyeah my dateâs too nervous to ask so can i get an extra bbq sauce?? ahahahaha thanks so much!!!!!â
jimin gets it but doesnât give it to u until u tell him heâs a great person or he looked sexy at the counter or some dumb shit like that
Reblogging myself because⊠what was that? Five minutes?
O_O
âŠâŠâŠmy friend has made me curious
help me roger
Update: after I reblogged this someone messaged me offering me tickets to the sold out Hausu screening with a Q&A and autograph session with the director
These never work for me, but hereâs to trying.
I donât believe in these things
But last time I reblogged one ten/fifteen minutes later I got a call offering me a job
But I reblogged it because I was waiting on hearing back from the job. So there you go.
Just a reminder:the natural diet of these birds is BONES. Not just bone marrow; actual bone shards. They pick up huge freaking bones from carcasses and drop them onto rocks until they get spiky pieces and then they swallow them. Their stomach acid dissolves bone.
look me in the eye and tell me thatâs not a fucking dragon
And they arenât naturally red like that. Thatâs self-applied makeup. They find the reddest earth they can to work into their feathers as a status symbol.
And they donât scavenge other parts of carcases, just the bones. 85-90% of their diet is exclusively bone. Hence why itâs only a myth that these birds would just pick up whole lambs and carry them off. Itâs not true, but in German theyâre still called LĂ€mmergeier as a result.
When I was 10, my mom made me wear a bra and it felt like a punishment for being different.
When I was 10, I took the bra off when changing for gymnastics and accidentally dropped it in the school hallway. A teacher picked it up and said, âOh, this must belong to youâ and handed it back to me in front of everyone. I quit gymnastics.
When I was 11, I thought maybe the boobs would be okay so long as they didnât get any bigger than would fit in my hand, so I kept measuring it, but they did.
When I was 12, I started wearing two or three sports bras to smush them down, until one day a classmate said, âAre you wearing two bras?!â while laughing.
When I was 13, a boy told me he wanted to squeeze my boobs âuntil they popped.â
When I was 14, I got cast in a play as an older character and a classmate told me I got the role because I had boobs.
When I was 17, my mom told me to return a swimsuit because it would be too distracting for my boyfriendâs father.
When I was 21, I got properly fitted for a bra and everyone felt the need to tell me how much better my boobs looked.
When I was 26, I got pregnant and my immediate fear was that my boobs would get bigger.
When I was 28, I got shamed for trying to feed my screaming baby in public without a cover.
When I was 28, people asked me âwhy are you bothering to use a breastfeeding cover?â
When I was 30, people gave me weird looks that I wasnât yelling at my kid for putting their hand on my boob.
When I was 31, I avoided going to the beach or pool because I didnât want to have to deal with boobs in a swimsuit.
When I was 32, I got asked, again, âwhy donât you get a breast reduction?â
When I was 33, I watched a 5yo girl get shamed for running around in sweltering heat without a shirt on and had to reprimand a bunch of tween boys who thought it was okay to shame her for doing something they do all the time.
When I was 34, my kid kept patting my breast and saying âMommyâs squishy breast!!â They will never see me express any shame about tits, because I want them to have a different mindset than I had. Yes, boobs are nice! Theyâre squishy! Theyâre fun! Thatâs the end of that.
Iâm 35 and no longer give a fuck. I donât care anymore. As a teenager my tits were covered in stretch marks. Theyâve been engorged with milk. My nipple changed shape with pregnancy. Give it another couple decades and my breasts will probably be all wrinkly. Itâs sexual when Iâm using it sexually. I donât fucking care, and I wonât be ashamed anymore.Â
Every time a policy or cultural hangup treats people with breasts differently, it fucks us over.Â
Tumblrâs new policy makes an active choice to participate in this culture of shame. By classifying âfemale-presenting nipplesâ as explicit material, Tumblr has taken a stance that any chest or breast that differs from a male default is worthy of shame and unavoidably sexual. The idea that breasts are shameful and unavoidably sexual is exactly what fucked me up for so much of my life.
Stop shaming people for having bodies.Â
Iâve been seething in rage thinking of this all day and @aibidil put into words what was reeling in my mind.
Seriously thatâs all it does. Â Iâm feeling cheeky today, so I thought Iâd share.
welp, iâll be using this in every meeting i attend
So I work at a pretty progressive company so at t the last meeting I brought a click counter and I clicked it every time a man cut someone off. I used a pen pad to keep track of the women cutting someone off. Because it happened twice. Both times after theyâd been cut off and were trying to finish a sentence. Eventually the men noticed the clicking and would pause and look around. At the end of the meeting I told them the results. In a one hour meeting men had cut someone off a total of 236 times. Two hundred and thirty six.
I want to know the man:woman ratio in this meeting so we can do some stats