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Was doing a Total Training video tutorial, and did an excercise with a water color broken down in layers by some famous illustrator.
And I just saw a similar watercolor of that type which made me think. Does anyone know what the school of thought behind the type of water color artwork where it seems like the line/sketchwork is in black, and the color
in the picture seems to be kinda put in "willy-nilly", and like it goes out of the lines, etc.
this type of watercolor artwork seems to be used a lot lately for kid’s book illustrations. What’s the deal with that? Why does the color go outside the lines, and not "fill the sketch in places.
It seems to be quite a popular style, but I don’t know the reasoning behind it, or if it’s a kind of "Copied" look of some other famous artist.
Anyone know what that’s called, why it’s done, or where I can possibly read more on it? Thanks.
And I just saw a similar watercolor of that type which made me think. Does anyone know what the school of thought behind the type of water color artwork where it seems like the line/sketchwork is in black, and the color
in the picture seems to be kinda put in "willy-nilly", and like it goes out of the lines, etc.
this type of watercolor artwork seems to be used a lot lately for kid’s book illustrations. What’s the deal with that? Why does the color go outside the lines, and not "fill the sketch in places.
It seems to be quite a popular style, but I don’t know the reasoning behind it, or if it’s a kind of "Copied" look of some other famous artist.
Anyone know what that’s called, why it’s done, or where I can possibly read more on it? Thanks.
How to Master Sharpening in Photoshop
Give your photos a professional finish with sharpening in Photoshop. Learn to enhance details, create contrast, and prepare your images for print, web, and social media.