Clip Studio Paint Tutorial 🎓 Master the Fill Tool (Colour faster and better)
Summary
TLDRIn diesem Video erklärt die Künstlerin Nadiaxel, wie man das Füllwerkzeug in Clip Studio Paint optimal nutzt, um Farben schneller und präziser aufzutragen. Sie gibt einen detaillierten Überblick über die Funktionen und Einstellungen des Werkzeugs, wie 'Refer Multiple', 'Close Gap' und 'Tolerance', und zeigt, wie diese effizient eingesetzt werden können, um unerwünschte Farbbereiche zu vermeiden. Zudem gibt sie praktische Tipps zur Verbesserung des Workflows. Nadiaxel teilt ihre Erfahrungen nach dem Wechsel von Photoshop und lädt die Zuschauer ein, Fragen zu stellen und mehr über digitale Kunst zu erfahren.
Takeaways
- 🎨 Das Fill-Werkzeug in Clip Studio Paint ist ein Game-Changer, besonders im Vergleich zu Photoshop.
- 🔧 Das Verständnis der Fill-Tool-Einstellungen, wie 'Refer Multiple', verbessert die Effizienz beim Kolorieren.
- 🖌️ Das 'Refer All Layers'-Feature ermöglicht das Füllen von Bereichen basierend auf allen sichtbaren Ebenen, auch wenn sie auf verschiedenen Ebenen liegen.
- 🏝️ Das 'Reference Layer'-Feature ermöglicht es, bestimmte Ebenen für das Füllwerkzeug zu markieren und zu referenzieren.
- 🔍 Die 'Close Gap'-Eigenschaft hilft dabei, Farbverluste durch kleine Lücken im Lineart zu vermeiden.
- 🌈 Mit der 'Tolerance' oder 'Farbmarge' kann man einstellen, wie tolerant das Füllwerkzeug gegenüber Farbunterschieden ist.
- 📏 Das 'Area Scaling' erweitert die farbigen Bereiche und hilft, leere Pixel entlang der Kanten des Linearts zu vermeiden.
- 🖼️ Der 'Enclose and Fill'-Sub-Tool hilft dabei, schnell Silhouetten für große Flächen zu füllen.
- ⚙️ Der 'Paint Unfilled Area'-Sub-Tool füllt Stellen auf, die das Fill-Tool nicht erreicht hat.
- 🚫 Das Deaktivieren von Anti-Aliasing kann helfen, weiße oder leere Pixel zu vermeiden.
Q & A
Was ist der Hauptvorteil des Füllwerkzeugs in Clip Studio Paint im Vergleich zu Photoshop?
-Der Hauptvorteil des Füllwerkzeugs in Clip Studio Paint besteht darin, dass es mit den richtigen Einstellungen viel effizienter arbeitet und dabei mehrere Ebenen berücksichtigen kann, um genauere und schnellere Farbfüllungen zu ermöglichen.
Wie funktioniert die 'Refer Multiple' Eigenschaft des Füllwerkzeugs?
-Die 'Refer Multiple' Eigenschaft ermöglicht es dem Füllwerkzeug, mehrere Ebenen gleichzeitig zu berücksichtigen. Beispielsweise kann das Werkzeug die Linienzeichnung auf einer separaten Ebene sehen und die Farbe auf einer anderen Ebene ausfüllen, ohne die Linien zu überschreiben.
Was ist eine 'Referenzebene' und wie nutzt man sie?
-Eine Referenzebene ist eine spezielle Ebene, die das Füllwerkzeug als Leitfaden verwendet, um zu bestimmen, wo Farben gefüllt werden sollen. Du kannst eine Ebene als Referenz festlegen, indem du im Ebenenfenster auf das Leuchtturm-Symbol klickst oder im Kontextmenü 'Als Referenzebene festlegen' auswählst.
Welche Funktion hat die 'Close Gap' Eigenschaft und wann sollte man sie verwenden?
-Die 'Close Gap' Eigenschaft schließt kleine Lücken in der Linienzeichnung, damit die Farbe nicht über den vorgesehenen Bereich hinausläuft. Sie ist besonders nützlich, wenn die Linienzeichnung nicht vollständig geschlossen ist.
Wie kann die Toleranz des Füllwerkzeugs angepasst werden, um feine Farbunterschiede zu erkennen?
-Die Toleranz bestimmt, wie ähnlich benachbarte Farben sein müssen, damit sie als gleichfarbig betrachtet werden. Eine höhere Toleranz füllt größere Farbunterschiede, während eine niedrigere Toleranz nur sehr ähnliche Farben erfasst.
Was bewirkt die 'Area Scaling' Eigenschaft des Füllwerkzeugs?
-Die 'Area Scaling' Eigenschaft erweitert den gefüllten Farbbereich geringfügig über den Rand der Linienzeichnung hinaus, um weiße oder leere Pixel an den Rändern zu vermeiden. Sie kann besonders hilfreich sein, um sicherzustellen, dass keine unerwünschten Lücken entstehen.
Wie kann man das 'Enclose and Fill' Werkzeug verwenden, um schnell große Flächen zu füllen?
-Mit dem 'Enclose and Fill' Werkzeug kann man schnell die Silhouette eines Objekts füllen, indem man einfach eine Umrisslinie um das Objekt zieht und loslässt. Das Werkzeug füllt dann automatisch den Bereich innerhalb des gezeichneten Umrisses.
Welche Vorteile bietet das Ausschalten von Antialiasing beim Füllwerkzeug?
-Das Ausschalten von Antialiasing verhindert das Auftreten von halbdurchsichtigen Pixeln an den Kanten und erleichtert es dem Füllwerkzeug, klare und scharfe Kanten zwischen Farben zu erkennen, was weiße oder leere Pixel an den Rändern minimiert.
Was macht das 'Paint Unfilled Area' Werkzeug und wann sollte man es verwenden?
-Das 'Paint Unfilled Area' Werkzeug füllt Bereiche, die das Füllwerkzeug nicht erreicht hat. Es erkennt automatisch, wo die Farbe fehlen könnte, und füllt diese Stellen aus, ohne dass die Linienzeichnung überschrieben wird.
Wie kann man mit dem Füllwerkzeug alle Bereiche einer bestimmten Farbe auf einmal ändern?
-Um alle Bereiche einer bestimmten Farbe auf einer Ebene gleichzeitig zu ändern, kann man die Option 'Nur auf verbundene Pixel anwenden' deaktivieren. Das Füllwerkzeug ersetzt dann die Farbe in allen Bereichen der Ebene, unabhängig davon, ob sie nebeneinander liegen oder nicht.
Outlines
🎨 Einführung in das Fill Tool in Clip Studio Paint
In diesem Abschnitt wird das Fill Tool in Clip Studio Paint vorgestellt und wie es effizient zum Färben genutzt werden kann. Die Autorin erklärt, dass viele digitale Kunstwerkzeuge ohne genaues Verständnis verwendet werden und das Justieren von mehreren Eigenschaften oft frustrierend sein kann. Sie teilt ihre Erfahrung als ehemalige Photoshop-Nutzerin und wie sie zum Clip Studio Paint umgestiegen ist. Das Fill Tool wird als game-changer für die Effizienz beim Kolorieren hervorgehoben, insbesondere für Leute, die von Photoshop kommen. Außerdem stellt sie sich und ihren Assistenten Diu vor und erwähnt ihre Social-Media-Kanäle.
🖌️ Zugang zum Fill Tool und den Unterwerkzeugen
Hier wird erklärt, wie man das Fill Tool in Clip Studio Paint findet und seine Einstellungen öffnet. Die 'Tool Property' und 'Sub Tool' Fenster werden erläutert und wie man sicherstellt, dass sie sichtbar sind. Die Autorin zeigt auch, wie man das Layer-Setup für das Kolorieren organisiert und verwendet das Beispiel einer Jinx-Zeichnung aus der Serie 'Arcane'. Sie weist darauf hin, dass das Layer-Management von den individuellen Vorlieben des Künstlers abhängt und demonstriert die grundlegende Anwendung des Fill Tools mit der Eigenschaft 'Refer Multiple'.
🏛️ Nutzung von Referenzlayern für präzise Kolorierungen
Der Abschnitt behandelt die Verwendung von Referenzlayern, um präzise Kolorierungen zu ermöglichen, ohne dass Farben über das gewünschte Objekt hinauslaufen. Die Autorin beschreibt die Probleme, die entstehen, wenn man mehrere Layer benutzt, und bietet Lösungen wie das Verwenden des Referenzlayers. Sie erklärt, wie man Layer als Referenz festlegt und wie dies die Füllwerkzeug-Nutzung beeinflusst. Verschiedene 'Refer Multiple' Optionen wie 'Refer All Layers', 'Selected Layer' und 'Layer in Folder' werden besprochen.
🔍 Korrektes Schließen von Lücken in der Lineart
Die Autorin erläutert die 'Close Gap'-Eigenschaft des Fill Tools, die hilfreich ist, wenn Lineart nicht vollständig geschlossen ist. Sie erklärt, wie man die Größe der Lücken einstellt, die das Fill Tool ignorieren soll, und geht auf die Abhängigkeit von der Canvas-Größe ein. Zusätzlich wird die Option 'Fill Narrow Areas' und der 'Tolerance'-Wert beschrieben, die helfen, schmale Bereiche korrekt zu füllen, ohne dass die Farbe in unerwünschte Bereiche läuft.
🖍️ Toleranz und Farbabweichung richtig einstellen
Dieser Abschnitt behandelt die Toleranz- oder Farbabweichungseigenschaft des Fill Tools, die bestimmt, wie nahe beieinanderliegende Farben als gleich angesehen werden. Anhand eines Verlaufs zeigt die Autorin, wie die Toleranz die Füllfläche beeinflusst. Sie verwendet ein Beispiel mit Jinx' Haaren und Haut, um zu zeigen, wie man Farben austauscht, ohne unerwünschte Bereiche zu verändern. Die Bedeutung einer geeigneten Toleranzeinstellung wird betont, besonders bei unsauberer oder texturierter Lineart.
📏 Die Bedeutung der Flächenvergrößerung
Die Flächenvergrößerungseigenschaft des Fill Tools wird erklärt. Diese Funktion verhindert, dass an den Rändern der Lineart weiße oder leere Pixel zurückbleiben, indem sie die Füllfläche leicht vergrößert. Die Autorin zeigt Beispiele mit unterschiedlichen Area Scaling-Werten und erklärt die Wichtigkeit der Einstellung 'To Darkest Pixel'. Sie betont, dass Area Scaling und Tolerance getrennte, aber sich ergänzende Funktionen sind.
⏱️ Effiziente Kolorierungstipps für Clip Studio Paint
Die Autorin gibt abschließend vier praktische Tipps, um das Kolorieren effizienter zu gestalten. Sie erklärt, wie man mit dem Tool 'Enclose and Fill' Silhouetten schnell füllt, weiße Pixel mit 'Paint Unfilled Area' ausbessert, Anti-Aliasing ausschaltet, um leere Pixel zu vermeiden, und mit der Option 'Apply to connected pixels only' alle Bereiche einer Farbe gleichzeitig ändert. Diese Tipps optimieren den Arbeitsablauf und sparen Zeit beim Kolorieren.
Mindmap
Keywords
💡Füllwerkzeug
💡Referenzschicht
💡Toleranz
💡Lücken schließen
💡Anti-Aliasing
💡Flächenvergrößerung
💡Enclose and Fill
💡Farbänderung auf ganzer Ebene
💡Hintergrundschicht
💡Eigenschaftenfenster
Highlights
Master the Fill Tool in Clip Studio Paint to color faster and more efficiently by understanding how it works.
Using digital art tools without fully understanding their properties can lead to frustration and inconsistent results.
Clip Studio Paint’s Fill Tool is a game-changer for artists transitioning from Photoshop.
The 'Refer Multiple' property allows the Fill Tool to refer to all visible layers, making coloring across different layers seamless.
Using the 'Reference Layer' feature allows the Fill Tool to only refer to a specific layer, improving accuracy when filling background colors.
The 'Close Gap' property in the Fill Tool helps avoid color bleeding by detecting and filling small gaps in the lineart.
The 'Tolerance/Color Margin' property determines how closely the Fill Tool matches colors and is crucial for recoloring specific areas without affecting adjacent colors.
The 'Area Scaling' property extends the colored area slightly beyond the lines, preventing unwanted white spaces along the edges.
Using 'Enclose and Fill' quickly creates color silhouettes, speeding up the coloring process for large areas.
The 'Paint Unfilled Area' tool can patch up any leftover blank or white pixels efficiently, saving time on manual corrections.
Turning off anti-aliasing with the Fill Tool can reduce the appearance of semi-transparent pixels along the edges, resulting in cleaner fills.
You can replace all areas of the same color on a layer by unchecking the 'Apply to connected pixels only' option in the Fill Tool.
The Fill Tool in Clip Studio Paint can refer to layers in folders, helping organize complex projects with many layers.
Using high values for both Area Scaling and Tolerance simultaneously may cause overlapping effects, requiring a balance between the two settings.
The next video will cover five essential features in Clip Studio Paint that many artists are not utilizing but should explore.
Transcripts
Learn to master the Fill Tool in Clip Studio Paint and lay down your colors faster and flawlessly by
actually understanding how the tool works.
Often we use a lot of fancy digital art tools without really knowing how they work.
We just look at the result and assume the results in the future will be similar.
However, that is not always the case, and tweaking and tuning values of 5, 6, 7 different properties
without getting the desired result is just infuriating.
In this video, I will explain and demonstrate
the functionalities of the Fill Tool and its subtools.
Last year I took a big step and transitioned from Photoshop to become a Clip Studio Paint artist.
And one of the first features that blew my mind in Clip Studio Paint was the Fill Tool.
So if you’re coming from Photoshop or something similar, you are probably not even aware that a Fill Tool with the right
properties can be such a game-changer for your efficiency when you colour your artwork.
And if you’re new here: Hi, I’m Nadiaxel.
I'm a professional, self-taught digital artist.
And this is Diu, my little fluffy assistant.
*Plop*
You can follow me on Instagram @nadiaxelart for general art updates and comics.
Or you can join my mailing list to always be the first to receive news about
upcoming content, tips & tricks, discount codes, sometimes behind-the-scenes.
Whatever goodies I can really come up with!
And be sure to subscribe to the channel (if you're not already), and hit the little ding-dong to be notified of my uploads.
Guys, it's time we dig into the tutorial!
Accessing the Fill Tool and Sub Tool Properties
When you open Clip Studio Paint and select the Fill Tool in the toolbar (it’s the Bucket icon)
you should be able to see two windows open up.
A “Tool Property” window and the “Sub Tool” window.
If one or both windows do not show up, go to the Window menu and make sure there’s a checkmark next to “Tool Property” and “Sub Tool”.
Your default settings probably look like this and even if they don’t do not worry because we’ll be changing the values around a lot anyway.
Introducing the Lineart
Now I’ve opened a file containing the lineart for my drawing.
It's Jinx from Arcane btw, in case you didn't figure it out already.
Because I just binged that series and it's...
FREAKIN'
AWESOME!
If you look out here in the Layers window, you can see that my lineart is on its own layer called “Lineart”
and below it is just a white background.
How you decide to structure your layers is up to you.
Sometimes I have all of my flat colors on the same layer
and sometimes I divide each section of the character into separate color layers.
It really depends on the individual drawing and artist’s preferences, so do it exactly how you want to.
In this example, however, I’m using one single layer for all of my flat colors. I will just call it “Flats”.
So here’s a demonstration and walkthrough of the magic of the Fill Tool in Clip Studio Paint.
The “Refer Multiple” Property "Refer All Layers"
Select your “Flats” layer, or whatever your empty color layer is named,
and pick a color. Just make sure your color the layer is below your lineart layer.
You can now fill in color by simply clicking an area inside your lineart.
Wait a minute.
Why does the Fill Tool color inside the lines when I am not on the same layer as my lineart?
If it's on a separate layer...How does it know where the lines are?
Well, if you look in the Properties Window
you’ll notice this property called “Refer Multiple”. When you activate this property
you can choose from “All Layers”, “Reference Layer”, “Selected Layer” and “Layer in Folder”.
In my properties, I asked the Fill Tool to take all layers into consideration when it fills in
colors. So all the layers you might have out here in your Layers window will be taken into account,
when the Fill Tool is being used. Look what happens if I uncheck the “Refer Multiple” property.
The Fill Tool now does not refer to any other layer than the currently selected layer,
so it just fills the entire layer with the same color, because the layer was initially empty.
Clicking the “Refer Multiple” property back on and selecting “All Layers” simply means:
“What you see, is what the Fill Tool sees”. Even if your lineart is scattered in 5, 10, 20 different layers...
...if you can see it, the Fill Layer refers to it for guidance.
The "Reference Layer"
Let’s take this a step further and say you have
outlined some background elements on a separate layer than your character. If you choose “Refer All Layers"
and start coloring your background
(on a separate color layer for your background of course)
you’ll notice that the color does not bleed all the way behind the character.
For some people, this is fine, but I would personally prefer the background to fill the
entire canvas, so I can move my character around later if needed without there being a big blank
gap in the background colors. One way to avoid the blank gap would simply be to hide the lineart
layer with the character on, when you’re colouring in the background. The Fill Tool can’t see a
hidden layer, and you can just turn it back on afterwards. However, this is not always a good
solution, especially if you’re working on bigger pieces with a lot (A LOT) of layers. So, another way to
get around this, is to use a “Reference Layer”.
Go to your Properties window and under “Refer Multiple"
select the little lighthouse-icon, which is the “Reference Layer” option.
Now go take a look in your Layers window. Anything here look familiar?
I'm waiting >w>
Well, if you look closely at the top of the window you’ll see another icon with a Lighthouse on it.
Select the Background lineart layer and click on the Lighthouse icon.
Or you can right-click on the thumbnail of your layer and select “Set as Reference Layer”.
See how the Lighthouse now shows up on your layer? That means, that now this layer is your Reference Layer.
And if you now select your color layer for your background and go grab the Fill Tool,
you’ll see that the Fill Tool ignores all other layers except for your Reference Layer.
In other words, what you see is this - and what the Fill Tool sees,
is this.
And it doesn’t matter how many different color layers you create, as long as the lineart layer remains your reference layer
all the Fill Tool sees
is this.
"Selected Layer" & "Layer in Folder"
The last two options of “Refer Multiple"
are just other variants of “what your Fill Tool refers to”.
“Selected Layer'' only refers to the layers you click a little checkmark on.
It’s like using a flexible Reference Layer that you can quickly turn on and off.
And you can have multiple layers selected at the same time.
“Layer in Folder” only refers to the layers in the folder which you are currently working in.
The “Close Gap” Property
If you’re like me and sometimes do not
close off your lineart completely, you’ll likely have experienced the Fill Tool finding all of these
little gaps and letting the colour bleed through them onto the entire canvas - sending you on an
hour-long search for small gaps in your lineart to absolutely no one’s pleasure. In Clip Studio Paint
you can ask the Fill Tool to, not only ignore, but also fill in these gaps for you AS you color.
The five bars represent the size of gaps that the Fill Tool will be looking for - you can
further specify a gap-size value, by clicking on the little arrow out here and type in a number.
The gap size will differ depending on how small or big you draw your gaps. And it also depends
on how big your canvas is - since gaps will be bigger, the bigger your canvas is.
So if you’re using this feature, try with small gaps first, and if that is
not enough, just adjust the gap size property accordingly, until you find some kind of a sweet spot.
Using a higher value of the “Close Gap” property may result in the Fill Tool not being able to
reach narrow spaces in your lineart - simply because it thinks there is a gap in your lineart it needs to close.
To avoid this, the first thing we need to look for is to make sure you have a setting
active called “Fill Narrow Areas”. You can check it by clicking the little Plus-icon next to the
“Close Gap” property. If this icon is not there by default, simply go to the Window menu and
select “Sub Tool Detail”. Here you can click the little Eye-icon to unhide any hidden properties.
Once you make sure that “Fill Narrow Areas” is turned on,
but the Fill Tool still cannot get to the narrowest parts of your lineart,
just increase the value of the Tolerance property until you get the desired result.
Which leads me exactly to the next subject.
The “Tolerance/Colour Margin” Property
The Tolerance, also known as the Colour Margin, refers to the tolerance in the difference of
colours when colouring or making a selection with the Selection Tool. The reason I mention
the Selection Tool is because it also has a Tolerance property and it works in the
exact same way as the Fill Tool’s tolerance.
I'll try to explain this concept with some visuals.
Look at this gradient. It goes from white and
all the way to black. I now pick a color, set the Tolerance to 60, and click in the
white area. The Fill Tool now fills up a big chunk of the gradient’s range with my color.
If I change the Tolerance down to 30, it fills less of the same range.
And if I lower it even further to 5, it only fills a very small portion of the gradient’s
entire range. The value of the tolerance is set from the value of the pixel you click on - that
means if you click in the black area instead of the white, like we did before, the tolerance
runs from that point instead. In other words; the tolerance determines how close the next color
has to be, to be regarded as the same color.
I know this can be quite hard to understand, so let me show an example with some colors.
Here I have colored the hair and the skin on the character Jinx, and they’re on the same layer.
Say I want to change the hair colour, but not the skin colour. I pick the new colour and fill it in
with my Fill Tool by clicking on the hair. But the new hair color bleeds all the way into the skin.
This happens because the Tolerance of my Fill Tool is quite high. In other words, the Fill Tool
does not distinguish between the hair color and the skin color. But if we lower the Tolerance,
the Fill Tool can now easily distinguish between the hair color and the skin color,
making it possible to re-color the hair, without affecting the skin.
The amount of tolerance you’ll need, depends on your specific colors,
so try some different settings to find the sweet spot for your current drawing.
The Tolerance or Color Margin property is especially helpful if your lineart is not...
...well, solid and crisp.
I often use a semi-transparent brush or a textured brush to line my artwork,
which gives the lineart kind of a blurry or uneven look if you zoom in.
Sometimes I even use my lineart-brush to shade a bit, making it more difficult for the Fill Tool to fill entire areas,
because it sees the shading as lines that it needs to separate the colors from.
In those cases, you can turn the tolerance
UP when you use the Fill Tool. This also eliminates a lot of white or empty pixels along edges.
And here’s an example where lowering the Tolerance value might be more helpful for you.
If you’re going to paint in some details on your character using only colors and
not lineart - in this case, I want to paint some stripes on Jinx’s pants - you might experience
the Fill Tool just coloring past your colored area - which is frustrating.
But try to lower the Tolerance in these cases, so Clip Studio Paint can now better differentiate between the base color and your detail color.
A lower Tolerance now lets me paint within the area between the two colors.
The “Area Scaling” Property
Another crucial property of the Fill Tool in Clip Studio Paint is the “Area Scaling”.
Activating “Area Scaling” simply means that when you put down a color with the Fill Tool,
the colored area will extend itself a little further, so you will avoid
those nasty white or empty pixels by the border of your lineart.
It is important that your Area Scaling property is using the “Scaling Mode” called
“To Darkest Pixel”. You can access the Scaling Property by clicking the little Plus-icon next
to the Area Scaling property. “To Darkest Pixel” is probably your default setting,
but just check to be sure. This setting means that when you are using area scaling,
the colored area will be extended, but only extends to the
darkest pixel in your lineart - preventing the color from overflowing past your lines.
Here is an example with three **identical** sets of circles. The top circles have thicker lineart and
the bottom ones have thinner lineart. On a color layer below the lineart layer, I will fill in the
circles with different amounts of Area Scaling. In the first two circles, I turn Area Scaling off,
in the next circles I add the value of 5, and in the last ones I max out the Area Scaling
with the value of 20. Now when I lower the opacity of the lineart layer, you can see
how far the color has extended at the different Area Scaling values.
Be aware that using high values of Area Scaling and Tolerance simultaneously can give some results
that require some cleanup. They sometimes even seem to be working against each other
and a lot of artists consider these two properties to be kinda the same thing.
However, that is not true, as the Area Scaling only extends colors, while the Tolerance determines
which colours are considered different colours or the same colour. But now that you know how
both properties work, you can find that sweet spot for your drawing where these two properties
supplement each other best instead of fighting each other.
And finally, I want to share a few features and tips on how to optimise your coloring
workflow so you can color your artwork more efficiently.
Tip #1 - Use “Enclose and Fill” to quickly create silhouettes for your colors
If you have a character that you quickly want to fill instead of clicking all little areas with the
Fill Tool. Select the Sub Tool called “Enclose and Fill”.
Just check to make sure it refers to the correct layer. Pick your fill color and
then simply draw an area outside the object you want to fill and let go of your mouse.
BAM!
Silhouette!
Tip #2 - Patch up white or blank pixels quickly using the “Paint Unfilled Area” tool
Sometimes, even with the best Fill Tool settings applied, there will be areas that the Fill
Tool simply cannot reach. In these cases simply go to the Sub Tool window again and select
“Paint Unfilled Area”. Then simply mark the
areas where there are white or blank pixels and do not be afraid of drawing outside your
lineart - Clip Studio Paint is clever enough to know where you want it to fill in the missing colors.
Which is exactly what this tool does.
Tip #3 Turning off Anti-Aliasing when using the Fill Tool
To further avoid white or blank pixels along the edges of your colors is to turn off
anti-aliasing when using the Fill Tool. You can turn it off in the Properties window.
The difference between using and not using anti-aliasing is the little
semi-transparent pixels that you can see along the edge here. Without anti-aliasing,
it is easier for Clip Studio Paint to distinguish between the colors when using Tolerance
and you will avoid a lot of white or blank pixels by the border of the colored area.
And lastly…
Tip #4 - Changing all areas of the same color at the same time
If you want to replace all the colors of the same color, for instance, the specific color used for the hair on the entire layer,
simply uncheck the “Apply to connected pixels only” and with the Fill Tool, you can now replace
that specific color with a new one using a single click over the entire layer, whether or not the
colored areas lie next to each other or not.
Okay, that was it. You guys should be mastering the Fill Tool in Clip Studio
Paint now. Feel free to ask anything in the comments below. I’m always
most active in the comments in the first 24 hours after uploading a video,
so if you have any questions you want answering, make sure you have notifications on and I'll do my best.
The next video will be about 5 features that you are probably not using in Clip Studio Paint,
but that you definitely should be. I hope you’ll look forward to it. Remember to Like,
Share & Subscribe - your support means everything to me.
Until next time, take care! Bye~
Diu: Weeeeeeh!
Diu: AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!!
*CRASH SOUNDS*
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