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Strange Markings Or Characters On Paint Tool Sai

How do you fill in Paint Tool SAI?

With the software "Paint Tool SAI", I understand how to use the "Fill" button, but it fills over the lines of a picture, so it's practically useless.

I've tried selecting and inverting, but I can't seen to get it so I can cleanly fill in ALL of my picture without it covering the lines and going into the background. Is there some special steps you need to make before you can do so?

My drawings are lined and complex. I've tried using the lasso tool with a simple enclosed circle, and it worked, but it is not working now.

Sorry, I'm new to SAI, but can someone please tell me how to do this action?

I just downloaded Paint Tool SAI,and there in no pen tool?

If you're just seeing the blank paper in there in nothing more then you probably press the Tab button. If you press it back, it should show it back to you. This really pisses me off last time for trying to figure it out and end up my drawing not being save because I closed it not knowing the reasons. If this is not the case and it is still doing the same thing, I suggest go to windows settings from SAI and go to hide command panels. If you have seen that check, that causes your SAI's windows to disappear. I hope I help you on this and be sure to ask me at rjblueacelite.infinity@yahoo.com

Strange Markings or characters on Paint tool sai?

So I recently bought the full version of sai-- took 3 hours to figure out what Ive been doing wrong, but, regardless, went relatively smooth earlier --but I noticed that the brush pen doesnt work on the canvas at times, but it goes back to normal after I save and exit the window then open it again. But this time-- which is the second time --I open it, and theres these.... weird markings-- which I don't believe is even a language --and now... I may be *tiny* bit concerned here....

Pleas help. I cant find any answers and im pretty desperate right now.

The program may not be able to handle DPI correctly, so it reverts to its normal size (doesn’t know that you have way more than 96 pixels per inch on your screen)Your resolution looks like some 1080p or higher, and Windows already does have custom DPI settings. The screenshot looks like 3000x2000 resolution, which is pretty large (3 of my laptop screens at height and two as width). Your taskbar is larger than mine, which means Windows does have DPI settings set.You should set the compatibility options on the program. Right click on the shortcut you use to start the program (if you don’t have any, you would configure the executable itself then; will teach you that)On the taskbar you would use that highlighted Properties button to get to the shortcut properties.In start you’d click/tap on “Open file location” (this will open where the shortcut is), then get to the shortcut properties. On the desktop you can right click and directly tap on Properties. In touch mode, long-tapping is taken as a right click.I have ticked “Disable DPI scaling at large DPI settings”; this is just a compatibility setting that would instead enable a raster scaling to occur. Do note that it’s blurry.If you need the program itself, I think changing only the shortcut may not be enough.EDIT: Actually, I have found that this setting disables scaling and causes the behavior you see on any app you set it on. So you may wish to untick it. Either way, app is not really compatible.

The black markings provide the same benefit an athlete gets from putting black grease or tape under their eyes.The black absorbs light, preventing reflection of that light into the eyes that would cause glare and reduce contrast sensitivity.Imagine two swans, one with white pigment under the eyes and one with black pigment under the eyes.  Which will have an easier time spotting food under the sparkling, bright surface of the water?  In times of famine, might this advantage mean life or death?  And if it means life, might the swan live to produce more offspring that might also have that black pigment under the eyes?Edit:  Confusion evident in the comments indicates people aren't reading the actual question.  The question asks "What could be an evolutionary purpose for them?" not "What IS the evolutionary purpose for them?"  I make no claims that the rationale I provided IS the true cause.  We can't really know the true cause or causes for something that happened long, long ago.  We do know that putting black pigment below the eye does reduce glare.  We can extrapolate that reducing that glare would be an advantage to an animal that survives off of catching fast moving fish below the bright water.  But other factors may have been more of a driver, or it could just be a mutation with no real disadvantage or advantage.Others are free to provide other potential reasons why the adaptation was naturally selected.

Congratulations for starting young ... I'm 45 and only started drawing recently.Start basic. I began drawing simple geometric patterns: triangles, circles, crosses, and so forth. Only later did I graduate to images such as you can see below.Michelle Gaugy already answered towards re-training how you see things. One illustration: Don't look at this as a stone. See first a rectangle that becomes triangular at the top. See then a white curved line near the top. See then a black-grey snakelike scratch across the lower part ... then two dark-grey shapes above from the right side, and then more black lines, like the lines in your palm.Draw one detail after the other, and eventually it will work for more complex subjects.In drawing this baby, I ignored the image as a whole: I focused on the shapes that would represent feet, then legs, then the curve as the belly seems to merge with the right leg...Chris Hart has written some good how-to books for basic drawing technique. I recommend them. They can give the details that would be too much for this answer.Practice daily.Eventually you too will be able to do this:Or this:Thanks for the A2A, Odysseus.

I had to read that carefully to make sure the old chestnut had not taken to decorating his inner ears with tribal art.Some, myself included, would say he never learned to paint, beyond the primitive. He had ideas and concepts but I have not seen anything especially technically advanced from him. He was involved with the concept of Cubism, along with others, and this resulted in some , to me, truly visually dreadful work; but he seemed to find his niche or inevitably his neiche was ascribed him as seems to be the case.Update; My reply to Michelle's first comment mysteriously disappeared so here it is again;I realize, as you are obviously more an art salesperson than a practicing artist, that this may come as a bit of a shock to you, but even as recently as the 40's and 50's there have been some exceptional draughtsmen and painters who have produced work far superior to anything Picasso ever did. Gallery-propaganda will never change that.Animators/cartoonists like Ub Iwerks who worked at Disney, commercial narrative masters like Al Williamson, John Buscema and Frank Frazetta, Brit-school narrative illustrators like Cam Kennedy.The painting you mention “Science and Charity”was a childhood knock-off of two other artist's works and style and is not even representative of Picassos usual output which as I mentioned before leaves me cold. The fact you attribute such hyperbole to such schlock tells us all we need to know.I'm one of the lucky ones; I can speak from the experience and benefit of working at Disney, passing their very tough drawing exams, I've been fortunate to have had friends and mentors such as Frank Frazetta, and Frank Langford as associates, and I know bulls**t when I see or read it, so if you want to pontificate yourself find a simpleton because I'm out of your league madam.Perhaps before deluding yourself regarding your claimed knowledge, you should get an education yourself, at least try to understand what "good" actually looks like. (full marks for finding a typo btw you must be proud)

Question about Microsoft paint O_O?

You could try going over the pencil marks with black lines, use the curve lines. Then if you still have some pencil marks showing you could go in and use the eraser to go over them and get rid of them. If you find it kind of hard to do this accurately just use the magnifier to make the part you are working on bigger, then return it to the original size using the magnifier to see if it looks the way you want. Hope that helps

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