Showing posts with label MS paint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MS paint. Show all posts

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Things I Need to Stop Doing with a Computer: Number 1



Editing the things that people say in comics to make them sound very silly.

You can do this too with just a little bit of either MSPaint or Photoshop. Sometimes on really sad days, it's great to make a much of these and then laugh at them. To all the readers of my blog, just for fun, find a comic you like, pick a panel, and let your funny side take over for a moment. Trust me, it will be worth it.

Also, discuss: are fudge cookies really worth that amount of anger?

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

The Magic of MSPaint







How did I get my start in Digital Art, you ask? Why, my good old friend MS Paint of course. When I was a teenager, back before I knew what Photoshop was, I would sit there for up to 8 hours at a time in MS Paint creating all different kinds of things. The image at the very bottom here was one of those. A person had a preset human figure and ran a contest based on how much someone could alter it. 8 hours later I emerged with an algae covered fishman with a conch shell on his head. I actually took third place in the contest even though I didn't use Photoshop at all.


After I discovered Photoshop and was still clinging to my pixel enthusiast ways, I would roughly create an image in MS Paint and then alter it in Photoshop, as shown with the image above that. I was not very proud of these and felt my interest in sitting there doing things pixel by pixel fade away...and then I got a scanner so I could actually post some of my real hand drawn art, as the pencil and paper are my forte.


Just last week I had an epiphany...what if I went a MS Paint in a bare bones go get 'em fashion? No premade forms, no Photoshop, no anything...just MS Paint. Still without a tablet, I grabbed my mouse and went for it, and created a pouty faced angry looking woman with weepy willowy hair in my own actual artistic style. It felt great to pick up an old tool again, kind of like visiting an old friend, and so I encourage other artists to pick up a medium that they haven't used in a long time and try something new with it. You may be surprised with the results.