I guess the term Noise had me confused with something I try to eliminate in my photos. Thanks for pointing out this approach. As a photographer, I look to digital artists like your self when it comes to color. PS photo related tutorials only deal with the tools to adjust color where you deal with the application of color. Also I enjoy the flow of your presentation. Good job.
Good morning! I just came across your UA-cam channel & can only honestly say from the few videos I’ve watched if answered most of my questions! Incredible! Question: as a colorist- do you recommend any beginner books to study? I am still trying to grasp “color” & “light”
I'm constantly using this trick for my pages. Also, sometimes Gradient Maps is a huge help for getting great skintones! And for the panels it also works cool in Overlay mode.
Awesome! Does the color pallet vary on the tone or feeling of your story? So like for example, if it was a group walking through a dark forest would it be a darker pallet? 👁
Hi. This is awesome information from different world for me. Exactly wha I needed. Thank you! Now... how to get the same results in Procreate while it does not have gradient maps?
Here's a question for you... Are there any options in Sketchbook Pro which also allow me to take advantage of the same Gradient Map tricks you used in your video? As it stands right now, I am using Sketchbook to do my sketches and then importing them into PS to do most of my flats and other coloring. The closest thing I can do in Sketchbook to replicate those Gradient Map tricks in your video is to just hit the dropdown list in the Layers palette after creating a separate layer with a simple multicolor gradient, and choose Color (not unlike PS, with its own dropdown list). Any ideas? Thx in advance.
this is my question... hope you can do this on next video MY W.I.P character im coloring it but once im finish they look like blurry even i set my image resolution in 300pixels what is wrong on my work..
As a photographer it makes me cringe that you picked this up as a photo editing tip. This trick is probably responsible for a lot of over-edited photos out there 😆 The way you're using it is super cool though! I'll definitely play around with it to get ideas for watercolour paintings. By the way, traditional minimal palettes work a little differently. Usually you pick a red, a yellow and a blue and you can mix quite a range of colours from those. Often one secondary is missing, because it turns out too muted, but it's not necessarily a limited palette, you can still get lots of colours. The colours all tend to be harmonious though, because you can't mix colours that would clash with their primaries. That's why starting out traditionally is so helpful, since there is an easy way to get harmonious colours every time. With digital it's easy to get lost in all the choices, especially without any colour theory knowledge.
You just changed my life.......... Im going back through all my art and doing this to pieces and its completely blowing my mind!!!!!!
K Michael Russell Incredible!!!
Looks great! Is there any version of this for Clip Studio Paint?
Limited color pallet - that's the term I've been looking for. Thanks!
I guess the term Noise had me confused with something I try to eliminate in my photos. Thanks for pointing out this approach. As a photographer, I look to digital artists like your self when it comes to color. PS photo related tutorials only deal with the tools to adjust color where you deal with the application of color. Also I enjoy the flow of your presentation. Good job.
Glad it was helpful! Thanks so much for the kind words.
Awesomeeeee!!!! Thank you!!!
Do you know if there is any trick like this in clip studio pro?
Good morning! I just came across your UA-cam channel & can only honestly say from the few videos I’ve watched if answered most of my questions! Incredible!
Question: as a colorist- do you recommend any beginner books to study? I am still trying to grasp “color” & “light”
thanks for sharing
Thank you so much for this!
thank you!!
You are very generous for sharing this. Thank you.
I'm constantly using this trick for my pages. Also, sometimes Gradient Maps is a huge help for getting great skintones! And for the panels it also works cool in Overlay mode.
How can I achieve this in Clip Studio? Thank you appreciate yor vidoes!!
I'm not aware of an equivalent feature in CSP. Thanks!
Love your videos KMR! Glad to have met you and hope maybe one day I can work with you on a project.
Very cool!
Great advice! Thank you!
I'm gonna be using this with my new pages for sure! Thanks!
Im kind of new to your channel and is GREAT
Thanks Marco. Hope you enjoy it. :)
@@colorwithkurt actuallly Im working on a project and your videos are life savers at this point, cool man¡
Super awesome! Thank you so much for sharing. I can't wait to try this out.
I'm learning so much in a Day. Thank you so much!
Yay!
Awesome!
Does the color pallet vary on the tone or feeling of your story? So like for example, if it was a group walking through a dark forest would it be a darker pallet? 👁
Excellent and useful tip👍🏼 Thank u🎁😊
This is the most useful tip I've come across in a long time. Thx for this :D
That was really helpful! Thanks for sharing!
Thanks a lot! Super useful!
Hi. This is awesome information from different world for me. Exactly wha I needed. Thank you! Now... how to get the same results in Procreate while it does not have gradient maps?
@@colorwithkurt affinity photo ipad?
This is brilliant ! Thanks man, you really helped me :)
You call it "a little trick". But in fact this is the ticket to real-pro-land. Thanks for posting!
Here's a question for you... Are there any options in Sketchbook Pro which also allow me to take advantage of the same Gradient Map tricks you used in your video? As it stands right now, I am using Sketchbook to do my sketches and then importing them into PS to do most of my flats and other coloring. The closest thing I can do in Sketchbook to replicate those Gradient Map tricks in your video is to just hit the dropdown list in the Layers palette after creating a separate layer with a simple multicolor gradient, and choose Color (not unlike PS, with its own dropdown list). Any ideas? Thx in advance.
All good. Thx for the reply tho.
this is my question... hope you can do this on next video MY W.I.P character im coloring it but once im finish they look like blurry even i set my image resolution in 300pixels what is wrong on my work..
i had scan drawing and i set it on resolution 300dpi and so on. i work on layers and thats always what happen when i was working
Wooow!!
As a photographer it makes me cringe that you picked this up as a photo editing tip. This trick is probably responsible for a lot of over-edited photos out there 😆 The way you're using it is super cool though! I'll definitely play around with it to get ideas for watercolour paintings. By the way, traditional minimal palettes work a little differently. Usually you pick a red, a yellow and a blue and you can mix quite a range of colours from those. Often one secondary is missing, because it turns out too muted, but it's not necessarily a limited palette, you can still get lots of colours. The colours all tend to be harmonious though, because you can't mix colours that would clash with their primaries. That's why starting out traditionally is so helpful, since there is an easy way to get harmonious colours every time. With digital it's easy to get lost in all the choices, especially without any colour theory knowledge.