View allAll Photos Tagged ipadpro
Apps used: procreate, snapseed, painteresque and psexpress.
First started with the background pattern (inspired by seeing someone wearing a shirt with a similar pattern). First drew the pattern, then roughened it a little bit up with snapseed. Next I drew/painted the pillar at the right. First I wanted to add the figure with the head just as is. But then I got the idea to make it look like someone was painting the figure. Last addition was the faded poster on the wall, for that I used a version of the image that was processed with painteresque. Final step was making the colors slightly more saturated with psexpress.
Why does she keep saying that? I doubt if Claude Rains was in Yuma. He was the Invisible Man not the Mummy! Oh but he did look like a Mummy in a Suit. Mummy in a Suit? Thats a movie title. See, he should've gone to Yuma.
Procreate , Sketchbook, Photowizard/FX,Plaster, Aliensky,
Matériel : IPad Pro 10.9“
Genre : Photomontage
Logiciels : Photoshop Mix / Photoshop CC / Lightroom CC
Date : 20.10.2017
Copyright : 05.10.91
Life Hope Final Project
2017
The Call. Painted Redstart. You think the wind gets in the wires and hums and listens as it goes along? That's the call.
Sketchbook—beta, DistressedfxHD, alien sky, Photowizard Plaster,
Michael J. Hildebrand is a wonderful visual artist. He drew a lovely tree back in December of 2021, and I couldn't help but redraw it.
I drew it using Procreate's default 6B brush, and sprinkled some textures on top.
#procreate #iPadpro #urbansketchers #urbansketching
We have our own manifesto here in Singapore: Work, Eat, Shop, Sleep, Repeat.
Another iPad Pro sketch. I did this in Procreate, without Apple Pencil.
Based on an iPhone photo I took of the George Robert White memorial in the Public Garden.
Obviously I'm having a lot of fun with this app. The more time I spend with it, the more impressed I am; I keep learning more about what it can do, and problems that it can solve for me.
I imported this one into Photoshop on my MacBook, intending only to extend the canvas and straighten the image a little. But, aha! When Procreate exports as a Photoshop file, it exports all of the layers! I noticed, and fixed, some areas where I colored things sloppily, and then thought I'd see what it looked like if I lightened up the colors. All I had to do was push a slider on a layer, and I was much happier with what I saw.
Oh, and how did I erase the sloppy colors? I started by using the trackpad, as normal, and sighed that this was so much easier on the iPad. Aha! But I have another iPad app called "Astropad" that turns the screen into a Cintiq-style drawing tablet! One USB cable later, I was back into finger-painting mode.