Book Image

Learn Clip Studio Paint - Second Edition

By : Liz Staley
Book Image

Learn Clip Studio Paint - Second Edition

By: Liz Staley

Overview of this book

Clip Studio Paint, the successor to Manga Studio, is used by over four million illustrators and comic creators around the world. This book will guide you through every step of learning this software, from system requirements and installation, all the way through to exporting your work for print or the web. Learn how to create new documents, customize tools to fit your working style, use ruler tools to create anything from straight lines to intricate backgrounds, add 3D elements, create comic panels using the specialized panel tools, utilize screentones and materials, add text and word balloons to your comics, create sound effects, easily flat and color your comics using reference layers, and bring your drawings to life using the animation features. By the end of this book, you will be able to navigate the Clip Studio Interface and program preferences, customize the various tools, and be able to create your own black-and-white and color illustrations and comics from start to finish.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)

One layer and many panels, or one layer for each panel?

You may be wondering: why use the Frame Border tools to create panels when we can use the various shape tools to simply draw a border and create our art inside of it?

Frame Border panels come with a feature that makes them a lot more convenient than just using the Direct Draw tools to make a square and drawing your comic art inside of it. As you may have noticed from the screenshots in the previous section, the outsides of the comic borders are shaded in with the color purple or blue. This is because the frame borders are made with a layer mask automatically on the outsides of them. Because of this layer mask being generated, we can create artwork that goes outside of the panel but that is automatically cleaned up.

For instance, let's look at the line in the following screenshot:

This line was drawn on a layer inside...