
The most important thing for me is making sure that the final look has an interesting composition and light balance. Though I allow myself some variations sometimes, like tints of green in the blue or shifts from yellow to orange. It has become something like a challenge for me to try and create something new in each drawing under the restrictions of the same color palette. My palette includes blue, pink, purple, and yellow - nothing else. I won’t say that I have strict rules for colors, but lately, I’ve been obsessed with one particular color palette that I use for all my drawings.

If you're working on an animation of, for example, a whole tree that is moving in the wind, and you see that the top of the tree moves too fast or too much on one side, you can just deform the tree in a single frame, and the modification will be proportionally applied to the whole timeline. You've got your mesh! You can use it as any other mesh.Also, they are animated! All the lines can be animated, so you can draw little things like moving grass blades or posters on a wall that are being moved by the wind.įor the animation part, there is also a very cool tool to edit multiple frames at the same time. To avoid your mesh to have still too many handles, go in the Curve settings and change Resolution Preview U to 2 or 3.In the box that appears, select a suitable value. To reduce them, enter "Edit Mode", select all the handles ( A), then do Right Click > Decimate Curve. Your curve has probably too many handles. Hop in and out of Edit Mode ( Tab) to make it visible In my version, I have a little bug whereas the Bezier is not immediately visible.

In the Outliner, hide the grease pencil object and select the newly created Bezier curve. Right click on your object > Convert to Bezier Curve

Front Ortho)Įntrer "Draw Mode", draw then go back to "Object Mode" But I concede that it's probably suitable if you're just making a sketch!Īnyway: you can definitely do it using grease pencil! What is the problem you're experiencing? I would argue that this approach doesn't really save too much time, since handdrawn shapes must be cleaned.
