Sketching Software Trial - Introduction

Published January 13, 2009
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This post is in stereo, posted both at my personal journal at trazoi.net and at my GameDev.net journal.

One of the things I plan to do in early 2009 is to brush up on my skills, as well as learn some new ones, in some dedicated practice sessions. My goal is to become skilled in all areas of game development and management. This is for a number of benefits: if I really have to I can make a game by myself; I can attract freelancers' interest better with higher quality working prototypes; and I hope to find good synergy and innovations between the combinations of all the different fields.

A big area I need to work on is my art skills. I did some somewhat undirected doodling and scribbling throughout the last few years and brought my skill up to "poor". After a lapse of the better part of a year, my art skill has deteriorated down to "very poor" or possibly "terrible". It needs some serious work, and that means serious practice.

I think this time I will try more digital art practice than before. I used to just doodle around on paper with pencil, but things hardly ever got finished that way. I have never been very good with ink due to my somewhat bad left handed pencil grip; everything smudges so easily. With digital it is easy to correct mistakes, plus I get more practice with my Wacom tablet and actually getting images into the computer.

At the moment I am only reasonable at using Inkscape, the free open source SVG editor. However a vector editor like Inkscape may not be the best tool for this job. Therefore I am looking for another good tool for a relative art beginner to learn with. I am currently reviewing a few that I have heard are good for this.

A brief checklist of the properties I am looking for:
  • Good as an equivalent for freeform rough pencil sketching, brainstorming ideas and building up interesting characters. Typically I do this with a pencil on A4 paper when trying to figure out what works and what doesn't. For a software tool to emulate this, the interface should stay out the way and make it easy for the ideas to flow.
  • Good for sketching the basic skeleton of an image. When I draw a typical Inkscape image, I usually start by doing a rough sketch as a basis. Currently I do that within Inkscape itself using the calligraphy tool, but importing raster images works too. A high quality finished result is not necessary for this stage, but it needs to be good to use as a reference image or as an underlay.


Highly desirable additional properties are:
  • Ability to ink the rough pencil sketch into a final version. The more I can get done in one tool the better.
  • Ability to extend further to make full pieces of concept art. Not essential, but would be extremely useful if I get good at a particular tool.
  • Any other features that I think would help in learning art - shading, colouring, use of different styles, ex cetera. This is not mandatory, but every extra useful feature for this helps.
  • And obviously, price is a factor too. I am more likely to buy useful software if it is cheap.


In short, I am looking for something that offers a fun, easy to use interface for rough pencil sketching and hopefully inking and other art features as well. A zillion extra professional features is not required.

Over the next week, during the periods I can stand my un-air-conditioned office space during the current hot spell, I will trial some software to see how it meets this criteria. My art skills are a bit shot, so I'll do a few quick doodles to see how it feels then try a cartoon figure. I'll spend maybe a few hours on each tool, then post a review up here with my comments. Once I'm done, I'll buy whatever I think makes the grade.


My list of software to trial has expanded a bit since I posted a query in the art forum:

  • ArtRage 2.5 - emulates natural media, especially oil paint but also has pencils and markers. Comes in a free Starter edition with less features, and a cheap US$25 Full version.
  • Autodesk Sketchbook Pro - designed to be a digital sketch pad. Is very popular with artists for the role I am looking for. US$100 for North Americans, unknown price for me.
  • Corel Painter Essentials 4 - Painter X is the leading product in natural media software. Essentials is the toned down version for a fraction of the cost. Essentials costs US$100 from Corel, although Apple Australia is offering it for A$100. (Painter X is about seven times the price).
  • Adobe Photoshop CS3 - The big brand name art tool. CS4 is the current version, but I already own Creative Suite 3 (I got it to get Flash plus all the other Adobe tools with an educational discount). Costs about as much as Painter X, but you can get the stripped down Elements for less. For me, cost is moot as I already own it.
  • GIMP 2.6 - The open source raster art editor. I have had misgiving about GIMP, but for fairness and completeness I will add this into the trial. Cost: free!
  • Inkscape 0.46 - Last but not least, my favourite vector editor, Inkscape. I currently do sketches with Inkscape's calligraphy tool. I am putting this in last just for comparison, plus I can compare a vector editor to all these raster editors. Cost: free!


That's probably enough for a series of handy tests, unless I find out about another good tool out there. I'll post each individual review here when I am done with the test.
0 likes 9 comments

Comments

nerd_boy
Completely not relevant, but...

Legend of Zoida > F-Zoid TZ

<.<
January 13, 2009 07:23 AM
paulecoyote
You are a student / teacher right? You could probably get a good discount on Expression Design 2. A little while ago the excellent blog Lost Garden did some work on Space Cute using Expression.
January 13, 2009 09:05 AM
Trapper Zoid
Quote:Original post by nerd_boy
Completely not relevant, but...

Legend of Zoida > F-Zoid TZ

<.<

I've got four banners on rotation. I thought Zoida needed a break. Currently the rotation is done manually as I haven't figured out a way to automate it in a form that the forum software likes.

I should make some more banners, now I've got scheduled art practice.
January 13, 2009 02:55 PM
Trapper Zoid
Quote:Original post by paulecoyote
You are a student / teacher right? You could probably get a good discount on Expression Design 2. A little while ago the excellent blog Lost Garden did some work on Space Cute using Expression.

Heh. There's SpaceCute stuff all over the screenshots on the Microsoft site. Plus Microsoft should get their site to work in Opera...

Technically I am still a student, however with my studies effectively over I don't think it's kosher for me to go abusing my educational discount privaleges now. I've only got a couple of weeks left.

However, it appears Microsoft Essentials has a weird upgrading scheme, and I can upgrade from Adobe Creative Suite for some reason. As long as that doesn't do anything weird and disable my Adboe license (and I don't see how Microsoft could invalidate a license from another company), then that means I could get Essentials Studio for half price. Still not cheap, but I'll keep it in consideration.

Edit. Wait. Scratch that. Apparently Microsoft Essentials Studio 2 isn't for Mac. Although they claim it is, digging into reviews appears that there's only a Mac version of Media 2. It doesn't seem to come with keys for Mac versions of the full deal. That's a bit underhanded.

Plus Design doesn't appear to support SVG. [sad]
January 13, 2009 03:08 PM
Oluseyi
This is why I don't think about Silverlight much yet; the entire toolchain (including Expression Studio) is unavailable to me on my home platform. No, Mono is not a solution.
January 13, 2009 07:52 PM
Trapper Zoid
Quote:Original post by Oluseyi
This is why I don't think about Silverlight much yet; the entire toolchain (including Expression Studio) is unavailable to me on my home platform. No, Mono is not a solution.

Plus it doesn't look good when the Microsoft Express site, written in Silverlight, has issues with my Mac under both Opera and Safari.

I know it's a bit unusual for indie developers to work on a Mac and then port across to Windows - it's usually the other way around. But I figure if the sales figures for cross-platform indie games show more than half go to Mac owners, doesn't it make sense to develop on your majority customer platform? [wink]
January 13, 2009 10:50 PM
undead
If you don't like The GIMP and you have Windows, I suggest to give a try to Paint.NET. :)
January 14, 2009 03:33 AM
Trapper Zoid
Quote:Original post by undead
If you don't like The GIMP and you have Windows, I suggest to give a try to Paint.NET. :)

I use a Mac for creative stuff. My Windows box is mainly for occasional gaming or porting these days. But Paint.NET is nifty. The tools are a bit too "Paint" for rough sketching though.
January 14, 2009 04:53 AM
johnhattan
I need some pies and a person who throws pies, like a clown. Pop Pies 2 has some cute animation but it's still a bit too much like Pop Pies 1, which gets 50,000 plays a day despite looking boring.

You draw me pies and a pie-throwing clown, and I give you things. Do now.
January 14, 2009 02:16 PM
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