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What was your first impression?Īt least I think it was.
#LAZY NEZUMI KRITA FREE#
Krita had the price tag of free so it was the first one I tried. It came down to probably a choice of Krita or Clip Studio Paint. I did buy ArtRage at some point but I wasn’t happy with the tools in that. I tried MyPaint but it never worked properly with my tablet.
#LAZY NEZUMI KRITA CRACKED#
I was looking for a cheap or free piece of software because I didn’t want to use cracked Photoshop/Painter, and I’d already used GIMP and, and neither were good for the art I was looking to create. I’m not absolutely sure, but I’ve an idea that it might have been through David Revoy’s work on the Blender Foundation movies, and Pepper and Carrot. I can happily say I never want to “go back” to traditional painting even though I was never any good at it in the first place. As well as this, functions like undo, zooming in and out of the canvas, layers and blending modes, gradients and bucket fill, the list goes on and on. So not only am I able to emulate any media that exists in traditional art with various software, I can also work on art styles that aren’t even possible with traditional. Soon I’m looking to buy a mobile tablet similar to the Microsoft Surface Pro, that’ll let me paint absolutely anywhere. In my bedroom with a Ugee graphics monitor and my workstation desktop, or lots of other places if I take my aging laptop and Huion graphics tablet with me.
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At school I was considered a C grade artist, and that was even when working on pen and ink drawings, a style I used to be good at but have since abandoned. What makes you choose digital over traditional painting?Ī few things: Firstly, I could never paint in a traditional sense, I was absolutely terrible. This was about when I found Krita, I believe. For a couple of years I made unimaginably terrible art and in 2015 I decided to shut down my DeviantArt account and start fresh on a new account, with my new style. After that was over (we didn’t win) I decided digital art might be something to seriously invest in and bought a graphics tablet. However the project ended up taking off and we ended up in the final stage of the competition. I did the graphics design work for a board game a team of us were working on for a school enterprise project, using the free graphics software and a mouse. My first time doing some sort of “digital painting” was when I was about 16-17. How and when did you get to try digital painting for the first time? Also game related, the recent rise of more retro and pixel based graphics in indie games is a huge interest of mine, and games like Terraria, Stardew Valley and Hyper-Light Drifter have an art style that truly inspires me. Lots of my favorite art of all time has come from large game companies such as Blizzard and Hi-Rez Studios. Youtube artists such as Sycra, Jazza and Borodante are another few I can think of. I will say that David Revoy and GDQuest in the Krita community are a big inspiration. Whose work inspires you most - who are your role models as an artist?Ī wide range of artists, often not particular people but more their combined efforts on projects. I also occasionally make not-great indie games, but as you might guess, most never get finished. Outside of still art, I also animate in vector and pixel art styles. I also occasionally paint textures and UV maps for 3d artwork. Over the past two years on my current DeviantArt account I’ve uploaded game fan-art paintings, original fantasy and Sci-Fi pieces, landscapes, pixel art, and renders of 3d pieces. Other areas of digital art I’m interested in include CAD, 3d modeling, digital sculpting, vector animation, and pixel art. I consider digital painting to be one of my weakest areas of art skills, so I spend a lot of time trying to improve it. Do you paint professionally, as a hobby artist, or both?ĭefinitely as a hobby. Outside of things like these I enjoy gaming from time to time. My interests range from creative projects to tech related fields like engineering, robotics and science. I live in rural Ireland, a strange place for someone so interested in technology. I go by the username of Fatal-Exit online. Hi everyone – my name is Cillian Clifford, I’m a 21 year old hobbyist artist and electronic musician, and an occasional animator, writer and game developer. Published 16th October, 2017 Could you tell us something about yourself?