This was really helpful!Thank you❤ But I do create a lot of work with shading and it has many colors and layers. I have been using the high fidelity photo preset in AI with maximum color limit to vectorize my art in one single layer. I am not always very pleased with result. Would love to see a similar tutorial with more complex art and colors.
I would really recommend that you try the Adobe Fresco app on the iPad - you can illustrate on vector layers with vector brushes so you would be able to create vector work in your personal style without compromising the detail or shading. I'm planning on creating a tutorial about is really soon too so keep an eye out for that 🥰
I used the Procreate 'script' brush for all the line art in this piece - it's in the free brushed that come with the app, I recommend increasing the the streamline and stabilisation if you want a really smooth brush for clean line art 🥰
@@miastilwellhinchey1471 Yay!!! I'm happy the tutorial was helpful - I'm planning to also share an alternative method for vector art with Adobe Fresco this month so keep an eye out for that too! 💕
You would imagine that it would, but I find you get MUCH better results if you do each layer individually. It also helps if you want to recolour layers or elements. 💖
There's a much easier way to do this and that's to do all your drawing in Fresco, as Fresco supports vector brushes. But don't forget, Adobe's new terms of service allows them to steal your work 👍
Absolutely creating the artwork in a vector app from the start is easier, but this is an option for creatives who want to vectorise something that they created in Procreate 🥰
This was really helpful!Thank you❤
But I do create a lot of work with shading and it has many colors and layers. I have been using the high fidelity photo preset in AI with maximum color limit to vectorize my art in one single layer. I am not always very pleased with result. Would love to see a similar tutorial with more complex art and colors.
I would really recommend that you try the Adobe Fresco app on the iPad - you can illustrate on vector layers with vector brushes so you would be able to create vector work in your personal style without compromising the detail or shading. I'm planning on creating a tutorial about is really soon too so keep an eye out for that 🥰
Thank you for this class. What brushes did you use to make your original artwork?
I used the Procreate 'script' brush for all the line art in this piece - it's in the free brushed that come with the app, I recommend increasing the the streamline and stabilisation if you want a really smooth brush for clean line art 🥰
@@LauraJaneIllustrationsThank you very much! I am really excited to give this try.
@@miastilwellhinchey1471 Yay!!! I'm happy the tutorial was helpful - I'm planning to also share an alternative method for vector art with Adobe Fresco this month so keep an eye out for that too! 💕
Thank you ❤
Hope it helps 🫶🏼 as I said in the video, I wish a tutorial like this had existed when I was learning illustrator 😂
The colours seem straight forward with no shading - would it not have been easier to import the whole thing at once and vectorize it all at once?
You would imagine that it would, but I find you get MUCH better results if you do each layer individually. It also helps if you want to recolour layers or elements. 💖
There's a much easier way to do this and that's to do all your drawing in Fresco, as Fresco supports vector brushes. But don't forget, Adobe's new terms of service allows them to steal your work 👍
Absolutely creating the artwork in a vector app from the start is easier, but this is an option for creatives who want to vectorise something that they created in Procreate 🥰
Adobe can take your work? I never knew this!