Not a major hurdle just room for improvement. Tagged: digital art, line art, photoshop, krita, mischief, lazy nezumi. But it'd be nice to simply *paint* more accurately, as is possible with other software. Krita is another program that lets you adjust the pressure curve to do some. I use a Wacom and I found replacing my nib with the "flex" tip very helpful too. Toward the bottom on the curvier S's, I increased stb. With CSP you can see where I tend to "slip" and the secondary lines (thinner ones, mostly to the right of the og.) veer off in a direction toward or away from the original curve. But, you can see it a little bit: the actual directionality of the lines (do they follow each other accurately?) is better on the black side (Lazy Nezumi). Again, it'd be hard for someone to tell the difference from looking at this picture. Hard to control exactly where the line is going, and in some ways the stabilizer can even fight against you. It's hard to describe, but when drawing slowly with CSP stb., it feels "slippery. The pull-string visual in other apps helps because it gives feedback about where you're going with a line, but it's not *just* the visual that's different. The best approximation of what I personally need is in the 20-50 range + "ABS" on + "Increase stability when drawing slowly". I'm not sure what the other user means by "feel" but I personally did try a whole lot of combinations of the stabilization settings, incl. Demonstração de como utilizo as réguas de perspectiva do Lazy Nezumi no Photoshop e um bônus mostrando como configurar as réguas do Krita.
Posting this in hopes that improvements might be considered - especially a pull-string type of stabilization (what Krita and PS have now, or what LNP calls "Moving Average".) This would also be helpful for iPad.
#Lazy nezumi krita software#
But, I'm not keen on spending another $30 for a companion software that only CSP needs nowadays.
#Lazy nezumi krita pro#
I tried Lazy Nezumi Pro with CSP and it helps a ton. Even Photoshop's is pretty good now, but Krita (free!) has the most robust settings.
#Lazy nezumi krita update#
I'm not sure why or how it works, but it just doesn't do much to help in that situation. Lazy Nezumi Pro update 118 (build date 18.02.01) is now available I've added a new feature to the perspective rulers called Box Mode When enabled, it will clamp your pen position to the limits of previously visited axis. You don't want the line to be wiggly or shaky (tablets always introduce wiggle at slower speeds), but you also don't want to draw it too quickly because you'll sacrifice control (maybe your first line was in the right spot, but the parallel contour line will either converge or diverge if you go too quickly).ĬSP's stabilization is not good.
The intuos Pie menu are unfortunately slower than. Its really fast, in 3d toolsets like Maya or Modo (hopefully in blender too, soon), it makes a huge speed difference. An artist glove helps a little bit, but still: long, parallel lines that require fine control are one of the hardest things to draw.įor example, imagine you're drawing a thin snake: long, repeating curves, close together. Lazy Nezumi Pro - mouse and pen smoothing in PhotoShop and other apps Thanks Lazerus, it means a lot About pie menus : Krita, which is open source, features a great pie menu. Proof: the default setting worked reasonably well.I've been painting digitally and traditionally for many years and I've always used a "blind" tablet (Wacom Intuos, now). Of course It was me who couldn't understand the interaction between the two parameters and dragging.
Unfortunately it was easy to adjust to behave like trebuchet or other sling which throws the painting spot too far away. Affinity Designers Stabilizer seems to work like GIMP's or Lazy Nezumi's weighted smoother, but the weight and string lenght are quite small. Ive been painting digitally and traditionally for many. Not true: I just tested things that I have seen in other answers and comments. Feature improvement request: stabilization could be better (similar to Krita, PS CC, & Lazy Nezumi).
It's the only directly to bitmap drawing application where I have used "automatic smoothing as you draw" like functionality. Actually Illustrator do not let me draw so bad curve as the non-smoothed curve in Inkscape was.Īffinity Designer hasn't adjustable smoothing, it has "Stabilizer" which prevents too fast direction changes. Illustrator and Affinity Designer have it, too. I drew the upper curve with the pencil without smoothing, made a copy, selected the copy, clicked the pencil tool again and dragged the smoothing from 0 to 79%. You can keep the smoothing on as you draw.