
Originally Posted by
Inkthinker
Yes. Drawing functions in both programs (really in most every program) in similar ways. That kinda manipulation is one of the benefits of digital media. I'm guessing it's not even cut-n-paste, from the way the figures are being turned off and on, they're probably separated Layers. By drawing on Layers, each figures effective exists on a different plane, and can be affected without making changes to other planes. Everything can be flipped, rescaled, warped or manipulated in a dozen other ways.
Other things you see Mark doing there involve making changes without sacrificing previous iterations, which is something I love about digital... draw a hand, then think, "ahhh, but what if I want a different hand"... on paper, that usually means either erasing the old version, or pasting an overlay on top and hoping the edges don't show. Not even a problem digitally, where all things may exist simultaneously, in various Layers.
"This figure is too big," no problem. "This figure is facing the wrong way," no problem. "This guy's face looks off-kilter," no problem. "This guy's costume pattern is wrong," no problem, "this one's hair is too long/short/spiky/silky/curly/bald," noooo... well, you get the idea. You can fix just about ANYTHING, with enough time and technique.
It takes some time and practice to get used to the new tools, they feel different and they act differently, but they're entirely capable of performing the same tasks plus a multitude of others which have no equivalency in physical media. It's a little like magic.
And it's why more and more professionals have gone or will go to digital drawing. Not everyone. But quite a lot of us, and more every day, as the next generation learns to use these tools from the very start.
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