Difference between revisions of "PicEdit Tutorial"
m (Collector moved page PICEDIT Tutorial 1 to PicEdit Tutorial 1) |
|
(No difference)
|
Revision as of 12:24, 26 December 2013
This article, originally by Kon-Tiki
Setting up the Picture
Plan the composition
First thing you should do is find out what should be on your picture. What should be in the background, what in the foreground, etc. Then comes the first thing you do in Picedit (except for opening it and starting a new pic) is setting the horizon. Draw the line where the horizon should be and remember the Y- coordinate. Then set the vanishing point. The vanishing point is the place where everything tends to disappear in if you draw the lines far enough. Some tips
|
Setting up the composition
Second thing that needs to be done, is setting up the composition. Draw boxes where you want everything to be. Some tips
|
320px |
Setting the perspective
This's easy and done really fast. Just draw lines from the corners of the boxes that aren't round surfaces. Make sure not to draw the line that runs through the box, unless the object in it will be transparant. When that's done, draw the lines where the object should stop. Make sure that these lines run exactly the same as the lines a bit further on (like the roof in the example). Some tips
|
The actual picture
Drawing the outlines
Now the time's come to draw the actual picture. Draw the lines according to the frame you've set up. Choose the color you want and don't mind the priorities yet. If you have some curved lines, draw them according to the lines you've set up, but you can stray a bit off. Remember: those black lines're just guidelines. Be sure to draw every line. If a line should be black, draw over it. Some tips
|
Removing the frame
It's best you get rid of those ugly black lines now. Go to the beginning of the history (press 'HOME') and delete (press 'DEL') everything until only the colors remain. Some tips
|
Adding a Sierra-touch
This's the moment we've all been waiting for. You're going to add the 'Sierra-touch'. The trick is to use the darker or lighter version of a color. Draw it a bit from the border and make it a whole. Fill it, then fill the rest. It's as simple as that. Same thing's for shading, but the border color should be the color of the shade then and the relief in the shaded part should have the darker version of the not-shaded color. Some tips
|
Adding the priorities
Now go through the history and add the priorities to the drawing actions of the other parts. This way, you'll save a lot of time you'd waste by tracing. It's also far more accurate.
Some tips
- Try to find the best action to add a certain priority action to.
End result
You can add more details than this in this picture. That's all up to your imagination.