Usually I use curve blindly without really knowing how it works but now I understand xD thank you so much for the lesson! I hope you stay safe and healthy. God bless you!
Thank you thank you thank you so much, I have spent so long trying to get my head around this, watching other vids and nobody made it as simple as you have, you have prevented another headache from searching Krita for me haha
I had trouble understanding curves but your explanation makes it sooo easy to understand! I’m definitely going to try the gimmick effect. Thank you!! 😊
I Watched 3 videos now, But, most of times, i was just listening... I mean, your voice is good to hear and learn hearing, and you talk slowly, is much better then those ones who talk so fast, like most natives, talk fast is not a good thing. I heard you talking about not being easy to talk in your non-natural language, it was 4 years, i think you're more realted to it now, but even if not, dont worry, talk slowly is always better. Thanks for the videos♥
Thank you very much for your feedback! Oh yes, this voice over thing in not my language makes my brain really going slower to process the translation. It works fine while typing on keyboard, but with speaking I'm often very frustrated by my slow output. That's why I really appreciate reading your words.
your channel deserves MORE subscriber than it gets. i wish i can capture my work right now which 70% of the process i learned from you! im so thankful i found your chanel 💞💞
So useful and clear for newbies like me, merci beaucoup! (And awesome art! I feel mean but I had to laugh at Carrot's expression trying to hang on there XD)
Hi! Yes, the filters 'Color Presets' are available in GMIC (and GMIC is now installed by default on Krita 5) Just, don't forget to press the little 'green arrow' icon (on GMIC panel) to download the extra/community filters. It maybe part of this collection.
@@すっとんきょー You're welcome! Have fun with the huge collection of color presets; they are great to add extra ambiance to any artworks. A secret weapon :-3
Hehe, I discovered "new layer from visible" existed thanks to a comment here under. It is not new, appeared on Krita 3.0.2 probably back in 2016 but I already took the habit without it as I'm using it since 2012 (while having it installed since 2007/2008 but not using it as my main app). What I like about this Ctrl+Shift+C is that I can use it "per panel". On this demo, the comic page I selected was convenient (same color grading everywhere); but often I have corrections to push per panels. Ctrl+R to do rectangular selection helps a lot in this case :D Thanks for the comment and adding this feature here, I'm sure it will help the one (like me) who didn't know it.
I'm switching printers and my new one doesn't accept rgb files, I am finding that when I switch the colorspace of my older art the colors flatten or dull, would these adjustments help or am I going to have to redraw/manually color them?
Hi, your new printer probably gave you a CMYK icc files and ask you to work with CMYK files. CMYK colorspace is smaller in some aspect than the colorspace of your screen, especially if you have a AdobeRGB colorspace display calibrated. You can find picture online of how your CMYK profile is large compared to your display colorspace so you can have an idea what you'll loose. It's often the satured pure Red, pure Green and pure Blue as on RGB that are lost. Sometimes CMYK have more interesting oranges, purples, magentas, cyans. There is also two ways to produce black: with the black cartridge or with CMY mix. Controlling the ink is something that takes time. I hope you can ask your printer a print proof, or a sample so you can get an idea of the rendering. Good luck with it, and if you want to know more on the topic, the Krita documentation has a very well written chapter on colorspace and colors.
Hi David, very good video as always. I was wondering if all these different techniques would not give you the idea of a new "ideal" color retouching filter that could be integrated into G'MIC? If so, don't hesitate to contact me :) Cheers and congrats for all your work.
Hello David, great to see you well and alive. Your tutorial is very informativ and well presented as always. I have a question that is a little bit out of topic, about a technical issue. Reading the video discribtion, i noticed that you working in Linux Kubuntu. I became a Linux user myself a few weeks ago and i have tryed Linux Mint and Manjaro. The Wacom Intuos5 Tablet i use is supported by both systems, but its a bit of a struggle to get the settings right. I wonder if Kubuntu could be the better choice for me as well, or is it as difficult to set up the Tabett as in Linux Mint for example? Would be nice to have information from someone who work as a professional artist with Linux. Thanks, keep save and have a nice week.
Hey, no problem and not off topic; thanks for your nice words. A reality is that distros are capricious about hardware. You'll see big groups of users defending distroA against distroB telling one is broken and other just works out of the box. Everything is biased because most of the time the distroA and distroB will works fine for certain type of GPU/CPU hardware depending on what the maintainer use themselves and bugfix for on their biased hardware-based point of view. My Kubuntu looks like being well optimised for my CPU and Nvidia proprietary card. I have a good blend of performance, stability and non glitch. If you look at my blog; you'll find my Kubuntu install guide and you'll see a gif animation screen recording of the Kubuntu panel. I don't own a Intuos5; so I can't tell. Still an old Intuos4 XL here (Wacom discontinued XL models for series 5 and series Pro and I like very large tablet). My model doesn't need gesture (and I know the artist who need that will be disapointed on Linux; I got feedback of user happy about pinch/pan gesture buggy on tablet, but working fine on pen display Cintiqs) and switching distro might not improve that. In a big week, the next LTS of Ubuntu family will be available. I beta tested Kubuntu 20.04; it will be a good one and I'll switch to it in the coming month (probably after the production of Pepper&Carrot ep33 and the book publishign project). Feel free to give news about how your situation evolves with distro. I'm always very interested to understand other POV as I'm interacting with a lot of users.
@@DavidRevoy Wow, that was quick! Thank you for your long and informative answer. Distro Hopping is kind of a thing, i think. There is a lot of great tutorials and Distro Reviews on UA-cam, but thats mostly Tech-Talk, specifics about GPU and CPU usage, installation guides and how to make your desktop look nice. But one can hardly find an Artist who makes a review on linux, at least that is my impression. I will check out your blog and get some more infos about Kubuntu. Its not that urgent, i'm just a hobby artist and all i need to do my paintings is installed on my Win10 Partition. I just want to learn to work with linux, its on my To-Do List for a long time and now i have time to do it. Thanks again, i let you know about my progress.
@@MarcoKrieger Ok! Here is the link to my "Kubuntu for digital-painting" blog post: www.davidrevoy.com/article761/kubuntu-linux-19-10-for-a-digital-painting-workstation-reasons-and-install-guide
@@DavidRevoy this is going to be a really good day! I wish i had found out early about your blog. So many of my questions are answered just by reading your blog article. Time to dig deeper into it. Thank you so much!
At 2:45 when you copy paste the whole image, could you not have done the same thing using Krita's built in function from the menu? Layer>>New>>New Layer From Visible. When a shortcut key is assigned to that function then it would be faster, no?
I think i've cracked the code. At that part, there was a part where the entire image was selected with ctrl-a (you can see the ants marching in the video), and ctrl-shift-c creates a copy of the entire selection by merging the involved layers. If you made a smaller selection box, ctrl-shift-c would make a merged layer copy of just that selection, not the whole page. I think for the workflow shown in this video, New Layer From Visible works better in terms of keystrokes-- you don't need to select the whole image at the start and make a copy. Saves you a shortcut. On the other hand, I think being able to filter specific subsets of your piece on the fly is worth keeping the shortcuts as is.
Oh the reason is pretty simple: this feature is pretty new (it a request at last summer Krita Sprint). I even didn't saw it was merged into Krita stable. I'm using Krita since 2012 daily, so muscle memory learned how to work without this feature. I'll see what type of shortcut I can assign to it. [Edit: xD I just did check: New layer from visible, born at Krita 3.0.2+. Not that "new" and it sounds like something that exist since 2016. Thanks for the reminder! ]
@@DavidRevoy I know what you mean. On any software that I use regularly I become used to doing things a certain way and when new features are added I sometimes am not aware of them or I choose to not try them because I'm set in a specific workflow and, unfortunately, old habits can be hard to break. Thank you for the this video. I think your videos are great and very informative, and I wish you could post them more often but in any case they are worth waiting for.
Oh, please report it to the developpers of Krita (via krita-artists.org/ , it is the simplier often , if you are not familiar with the bug tracker.). Be sure to add your Krita version and operating system. Thanks! (here I have a ton of bug to report for Krita/5.0beta on my TODO).
Opened is pronounced "opend", not "open-ED". Same with every other word with the "ed" suffix. It makes it extremely hard to understand what you're saying.
hey hold up....at 38:06 how did you get more than 10 favorite brushes?
Hey! On the settings > General > Miscellaneous ; then it is the "Number of Palette Presets" (mine has 26)
@@DavidRevoy oh wow thank you!
@@DavidRevoy thanks!!
At last, David. I wish & hope you and your family well. Tyou.
Usually I use curve blindly without really knowing how it works but now I understand xD thank you so much for the lesson! I hope you stay safe and healthy. God bless you!
Perfect timing!! I was about to finish a piece but wasn't happy with the contrast, yet I didn't know how to adjust it in Krita. Thank you so much!!
Thank you thank you thank you so much, I have spent so long trying to get my head around this, watching other vids and nobody made it as simple as you have, you have prevented another headache from searching Krita for me haha
Thank you for watching (and for taking the time with it: this video is a bit too long compare to my newer one).
Most excellent. I value your tutorials in Krita and enjoy your artwork immensely. Thank you.
I had trouble understanding curves but your explanation makes it sooo easy to understand! I’m definitely going to try the gimmick effect. Thank you!! 😊
I Watched 3 videos now, But, most of times, i was just listening...
I mean, your voice is good to hear and learn hearing, and you talk slowly, is much better then those ones who talk so fast, like most natives, talk fast is not a good thing.
I heard you talking about not being easy to talk in your non-natural language, it was 4 years, i think you're more realted to it now, but even if not, dont worry, talk slowly is always better.
Thanks for the videos♥
Thank you very much for your feedback! Oh yes, this voice over thing in not my language makes my brain really going slower to process the translation. It works fine while typing on keyboard, but with speaking I'm often very frustrated by my slow output. That's why I really appreciate reading your words.
Merci beaucoup pour ton travail, c'est extrêmement utile quand on débute sur Krita !
David, impresive and instructive. Thank you very much.
When I see that you uploaded something I drop everything and watch
your channel deserves MORE subscriber than it gets. i wish i can capture my work right now which 70% of the process i learned from you! im so thankful i found your chanel 💞💞
Many thanks for your sweet words Xee! And all the best luck for your future artworks
THANK YOU!! your tutorials are super useful, and you always inspire me to draw!!
Thank you very much for your comment!
I really like those art-works
Thank you! Most of them are from my webcomic: www.peppercarrot.com/ , I hope you'll like my stories and humor as well
Thank you so much for making such incredible videos for free, hope u have a great day ✨
Thanks! Same for you :)
That's really awesome! One of your best videos yet.
Thanks for all the info.
I love the way you draw😍
you are a french hero, thank you so much you masterful artist :D! Love it!
Thank you very much!
Merci beaucoup ! Pepper & Carrot, c'est toujours aussi bien !
We need more tutorial my man, thanks!
Thank you! Learned a lot that will be very helpful. Glad you are alright!
Thank you for For teaching digital art work
Thanks David lots of love keep teaching
wow good jobI will apply it later to my drawing when I draw later
Welcome back David.
Thank you David, very cool
Thanks so much! Very instructive and clear.
This channel is so underrated.
Thank you for your nice words!
So useful and clear for newbies like me, merci beaucoup! (And awesome art! I feel mean but I had to laugh at Carrot's expression trying to hang on there XD)
This is so wonderful
You are so incredibly helpful! Merci beaucoup!
Hello! from Japan.
this is very useful but can I use on krita 5.1.0?
I need to use that color preset!!!
Hi! Yes, the filters 'Color Presets' are available in GMIC (and GMIC is now installed by default on Krita 5) Just, don't forget to press the little 'green arrow' icon (on GMIC panel) to download the extra/community filters. It maybe part of this collection.
@@DavidRevoy I mistakenly thought there were no color presets.
I looked carefully and found it.
Thanks for replying!
@@すっとんきょー You're welcome! Have fun with the huge collection of color presets; they are great to add extra ambiance to any artworks. A secret weapon :-3
I'm used to make a "new layer from visible" (i've made a shortcut for it) I didn't know about ctrl SHIFT c !
Hehe, I discovered "new layer from visible" existed thanks to a comment here under. It is not new, appeared on Krita 3.0.2 probably back in 2016 but I already took the habit without it as I'm using it since 2012 (while having it installed since 2007/2008 but not using it as my main app). What I like about this Ctrl+Shift+C is that I can use it "per panel". On this demo, the comic page I selected was convenient (same color grading everywhere); but often I have corrections to push per panels. Ctrl+R to do rectangular selection helps a lot in this case :D Thanks for the comment and adding this feature here, I'm sure it will help the one (like me) who didn't know it.
This is very useful.Thank you for this video! 😍👍
Thank you so much
OMG thanks tor this video!!!
Loved the accent 💕
I'm switching printers and my new one doesn't accept rgb files, I am finding that when I switch the colorspace of my older art the colors flatten or dull, would these adjustments help or am I going to have to redraw/manually color them?
Hi, your new printer probably gave you a CMYK icc files and ask you to work with CMYK files. CMYK colorspace is smaller in some aspect than the colorspace of your screen, especially if you have a AdobeRGB colorspace display calibrated. You can find picture online of how your CMYK profile is large compared to your display colorspace so you can have an idea what you'll loose. It's often the satured pure Red, pure Green and pure Blue as on RGB that are lost. Sometimes CMYK have more interesting oranges, purples, magentas, cyans. There is also two ways to produce black: with the black cartridge or with CMY mix. Controlling the ink is something that takes time.
I hope you can ask your printer a print proof, or a sample so you can get an idea of the rendering. Good luck with it, and if you want to know more on the topic, the Krita documentation has a very well written chapter on colorspace and colors.
FINALY, THENKYO, i watch to many fakin fury guide for no reson
I'm one year late... but thank you for this!
Hi David, very good video as always. I was wondering if all these different techniques would not give you the idea of a new "ideal" color retouching filter that could be integrated into G'MIC? If so, don't hesitate to contact me :)
Cheers and congrats for all your work.
I'm still learning posture...I will be back!
Wait 😳🥺 how do you color a sketch digitally in Krita?
Thank You :)
Love this accent
3:27
Hello David, great to see you well and alive.
Your tutorial is very informativ and well presented as always.
I have a question that is a little bit out of topic, about a technical issue.
Reading the video discribtion, i noticed that you working in Linux Kubuntu.
I became a Linux user myself a few weeks ago and i have tryed Linux Mint and Manjaro.
The Wacom Intuos5 Tablet i use is supported by both systems, but its a bit of a struggle to get the settings right.
I wonder if Kubuntu could be the better choice for me as well, or is it as difficult to set up the Tabett as in Linux Mint for example?
Would be nice to have information from someone who work as a professional artist with Linux.
Thanks, keep save and have a nice week.
Hey, no problem and not off topic; thanks for your nice words. A reality is that distros are capricious about hardware. You'll see big groups of users defending distroA against distroB telling one is broken and other just works out of the box. Everything is biased because most of the time the distroA and distroB will works fine for certain type of GPU/CPU hardware depending on what the maintainer use themselves and bugfix for on their biased hardware-based point of view. My Kubuntu looks like being well optimised for my CPU and Nvidia proprietary card. I have a good blend of performance, stability and non glitch. If you look at my blog; you'll find my Kubuntu install guide and you'll see a gif animation screen recording of the Kubuntu panel. I don't own a Intuos5; so I can't tell. Still an old Intuos4 XL here (Wacom discontinued XL models for series 5 and series Pro and I like very large tablet). My model doesn't need gesture (and I know the artist who need that will be disapointed on Linux; I got feedback of user happy about pinch/pan gesture buggy on tablet, but working fine on pen display Cintiqs) and switching distro might not improve that. In a big week, the next LTS of Ubuntu family will be available. I beta tested Kubuntu 20.04; it will be a good one and I'll switch to it in the coming month (probably after the production of Pepper&Carrot ep33 and the book publishign project). Feel free to give news about how your situation evolves with distro. I'm always very interested to understand other POV as I'm interacting with a lot of users.
@@DavidRevoy Wow, that was quick!
Thank you for your long and informative answer.
Distro Hopping is kind of a thing, i think.
There is a lot of great tutorials and Distro Reviews on UA-cam, but thats mostly Tech-Talk, specifics about GPU and CPU usage, installation guides and how to make your desktop look nice.
But one can hardly find an Artist who makes a review on linux, at least that is my impression.
I will check out your blog and get some more infos about Kubuntu.
Its not that urgent, i'm just a hobby artist and all i need to do my paintings is installed on my Win10 Partition.
I just want to learn to work with linux, its on my To-Do List for a long time and now i have time to do it.
Thanks again, i let you know about my progress.
@@MarcoKrieger Ok! Here is the link to my "Kubuntu for digital-painting" blog post: www.davidrevoy.com/article761/kubuntu-linux-19-10-for-a-digital-painting-workstation-reasons-and-install-guide
@@DavidRevoy this is going to be a really good day!
I wish i had found out early about your blog.
So many of my questions are answered just by reading your blog article.
Time to dig deeper into it.
Thank you so much!
At 2:45 when you copy paste the whole image, could you not have done the same thing using Krita's built in function from the menu? Layer>>New>>New Layer From Visible. When a shortcut key is assigned to that function then it would be faster, no?
I think i've cracked the code. At that part, there was a part where the entire image was selected with ctrl-a (you can see the ants marching in the video), and ctrl-shift-c creates a copy of the entire selection by merging the involved layers. If you made a smaller selection box, ctrl-shift-c would make a merged layer copy of just that selection, not the whole page.
I think for the workflow shown in this video, New Layer From Visible works better in terms of keystrokes-- you don't need to select the whole image at the start and make a copy. Saves you a shortcut. On the other hand, I think being able to filter specific subsets of your piece on the fly is worth keeping the shortcuts as is.
Oh the reason is pretty simple: this feature is pretty new (it a request at last summer Krita Sprint). I even didn't saw it was merged into Krita stable. I'm using Krita since 2012 daily, so muscle memory learned how to work without this feature. I'll see what type of shortcut I can assign to it.
[Edit: xD I just did check: New layer from visible, born at Krita 3.0.2+. Not that "new" and it sounds like something that exist since 2016. Thanks for the reminder! ]
@@DavidRevoy I know what you mean. On any software that I use regularly I become used to doing things a certain way and when new features are added I sometimes am not aware of them or I choose to not try them because I'm set in a specific workflow and, unfortunately, old habits can be hard to break.
Thank you for the this video. I think your videos are great and very informative, and I wish you could post them more often but in any case they are worth waiting for.
hmm, it seems I can't put a shortcut for the cross-channel adjustment
Oh, please report it to the developpers of Krita (via krita-artists.org/ , it is the simplier often , if you are not familiar with the bug tracker.). Be sure to add your Krita version and operating system. Thanks! (here I have a ton of bug to report for Krita/5.0beta on my TODO).
@@DavidRevoy oh so it's a bug, okay thanks bro
Arigatougosaimasu
Actually I save it then transfer it to my phone to adjust the colour scheme🤣🤣
Mmh tu a un accent fr xD
Sinon très cool merci
Tu parle français ?
Oui, je suis Français. C'est ma langue natale.
Opened is pronounced "opend", not "open-ED". Same with every other word with the "ed" suffix. It makes it extremely hard to understand what you're saying.