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Some Questions Regarding Photoshop Vs. Manga Studio. Tech Specs And Preferences

Photoshop CS4 or Manga Studio?

i use both....and when creating very specific things i like photoshop best as i am more comfortable with it.... but

i also like manga studio for it specifics for manga creation ..........i have also used toon boom with is also nice and has its own features..

i guess its a matter of preference...but if you can have both then that would be my suggestion.

cheers

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Manga Studio 5 doesn't recognize my pen tablets pen pressure?

I have manga studio 5 and I just bought a bamboo pen tablet. The tablet doesn't require batteries, it's usb. I'm having a problem just on manga studio no other software's. For some reason when I am using any pen/eraser tool the software doesn't recognize my pens pressure. The line then shows up as the lines do in the accessory, paint, that comes with windows. I've searched around and no one else seems to have this problem? It would super helpful if anyone knows what's wrong or how to fix it. I've tried various things and now I'm just getting beyond frustrated with it not working. I just want to get back to drawing normally.

This is like asking what’s better: a pickup truck, or a clown car. Photoshop isn’t really an art program, it’s an image editing suite. It combines tools for graphic designers, artists, photo manipulators, and offers extensive controls for all the tools.Corel painter, conversely, is for pretending that your drawings look better when drawn with a tacky simulated crayon texture, and is excellent at making you think that buying a brush pack for $79 will help (Actually, that might be SAI).If you just want to play around and have fun, go for the Corel clown car Painter. If you want to get some work done, get Adobe PowerHouse.(I probably sound caustic, but really… unless someone fully intends to dig into the nuts and bolts of their software, and wants to publish images online or in print, or work at a studio, may as well just go with painter or whatnot. Photoshop is not a toy, plus it’s deep and dense).

Free online photo editor like Photoshop?

FREE Online Photo Editors:

1) PhotoShop's Own Online Editor:https://www.photoshop.com/express/landin...
2) FotoFlexer - The world's most advanced online photo editor: http://fotoflexer.com/
3) HP Creative Studio:http://h30393.www3.hp.com/printing/app/u...
4) The interface looks almost identical to Photoshop (Pixir): http://www.pixlr.com/editor/

5)Looks similar to Photoshop, but is a little tricky to use (Splashup): http://www.splashup.com/

6) SUMO Paint: http://www.sumopaint.com/web/
7) Was happy to see that this one has rulers and can drag guides (Phoenix Image Editor): http://www.aviary.com/
8) Another photo editor that doesn’t really look like Photoshop but is really easy to use: http://fotoflexer.com/
9)Another one that’s great for scrapbookers: http://www.picnik.com/app
10) http://www.onlineimageeditor.info/

Hope it helps :)

GIMP is certainly good enough for digital art. Make sure you also download the GIMP extensions pack here: GIMP Extensions The extensions pack contains all the GIMP Paint Studio Brushes, Dynamics, Gradients, Palettes, Patterns, Splashes, and tool-presets, which are fabulous for painting with.There are also some other open source painting programs worth a look, such as MyPaint, and Krita and for vector graphics Inkscape.Even better, you can get them all because they are all free.

A book cover is ultimately a single page, and will feature a relatively limited amount of text, so PhotoShop or Illustrator are suitable for the task.It depends largely on the visual style of the cover (or part thereof). If the application gets in the way of better design, you’re probably using the wrong one.Some covers are hard-line graphics (Illustrator), and others are more raster image based (PhotoShop). Sometimes type needs heavy visual treatment (Illustrator base, with PhotoShop treatments)My preference is to mix & match applications for different aspects of the cover, and bring everything together in InDesign.For an image-based cover, I typically create the main visuals in Photoshop and place into InDesign as a link. If the cover style is more graphic, I’ll draw and prep vector art in Illustrator and paste directly into InDesign as a shape group. I find InDesign’s color swatches and paragraph styles easier to set up and they’re great to scrub through options quickly. Also, in InDesign you can just option-drag a page to duplicate a spread to prepare alternate concept variations for clients, which is a huge time saver.Also, a multi-application approach makes it easier if you need to create multiple language versions. By default the approach is more modular, and you have a choice of pagination or layer management to develop the different languages.

Is the Wacom intuos pro large, too big for photoshop use?

It's ultimately a personal preference. Some people like to cuddle with a smaller pad. Some devote their desktop space to their larger tablet.

I have an older Intuos with a 6×8 active area that fits well on my desk. I typically sketch things on 6×9″ pads, so it was a natural fit.

What software for manga editing?

In theory you should be able to use any graphic editor since the process is simple editing. These are all free:
Photofiltre, Artweaver, TwistedBrush, Photo!Editor, Pixia, Gimp, Photoscape, Photobie and Paint.NET.

However if you want to specialise in Manga creation and editing then try Lost Marble Moho, which got taken over and is now called Anime Studio also available in a Pro version http://my.smithmicro.com/win/animepro/in... you might be able to find the old free version of Moho somewhere.

There is Manga Studio Debut or EX http://my.smithmicro.com/win/manga/index... and http://my.smithmicro.com/win/mangaex/ind...
There is also Deleter COMICWORKS as Anime/Manga drawing software http://www.deleter.jp/eng/cw_english/ Another is CG illust designed to help draw computer graphic illustrations http://www.cgillust.com/eng/ Another is MangaMaker CCK http://zenratai.com/software/mangamaker/

You could also look at Toon Boom software:
http://www.toonboom.com/main/

Daz Studio is more 3d art but its free and they have Manga characters:
http://www.daz3d.com/i/software/studio?_m=d

Another resource could be looking at HeroMachine!http://www.ugo.com/channels/comics/heroMachine2/heromachine2.asp

KToon is free animation software but i have not seen manga done on it yet:
http://ktoon.toonka.com/index.php?option=com_frontpage&Itemid=1

I know there's a Photoshop Manga-effect Plugin:
http://www.tnksoft.com/soft/graphics/jcspeed/index.php?category=english

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