Wow ! I'm impressed ! Good job !Ok, this is what happens if I get all serious and spend like, 4 hours on a study...
Mark, it remainds me some Ghibli landscapes (take a look at the book below if you can find it somewhere)
Wow ! I'm impressed ! Good job !Ok, this is what happens if I get all serious and spend like, 4 hours on a study...
beautiful!lemec wrote:Ok, this is what happens if I get all serious and spend like, 4 hours on a study...
Heh, I've been looking through the Spirited Away artbook and seen some real jaw-dropping watercolours. I have the playback for that last one if you want it. Kind of huge, though...Fabrice wrote: Wow ! I'm impressed ! Good job !
Mark, it remainds me some Ghibli landscapes (take a look at the book below if you can find it somewhere)
1. give your layers unique namesGeopeto wrote:Thank you for your thoughts on this, your time is appreciated. So far it seems i haven't figured out a decent "system" for working with layers, but my biggest problem is, i just forget to switch layers. I tend to concentrate on what i am putting on the work area and forget all about layers. I do find some very useful versatility, in layers and will continue to experiment.
Spirited Away ... so I was not so far from your sourcelemec wrote:Heh, I've been looking through the Spirited Away artbook and seen some real jaw-dropping watercolours. I have the playback for that last one if you want it. Kind of huge, though...Fabrice wrote: Wow ! I'm impressed ! Good job !
Mark, it remainds me some Ghibli landscapes (take a look at the book below if you can find it somewhere)
I will do that, i have not had time as yet, but i will get back to you.masterchief wrote: 1. give your layers unique names
2. select the comma keyboard shortcut (,) which is mapped to Layer:Pick Layer by default in TVP v9
3. click on color you want and it will give option to select appropriate layer if it exists on more than one layer
let me know how it works for you....
you have to point it in the preview window, not on the timeline .Sierra K Rose wrote:... It just disappears when I point it at anything on the timeline.