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[1]Home
The Garden
[3]Now
[4]About
notes
evergreen
What App is That?
A guide to the apps and tools I use to create illustrations
• [6]How to Illustrate
Planted over 3 years agoLast tended over 2 years ago
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"What app is that?"
[8]
I'm a Promiscuous Polytooler
I use wide variety of different tools and apps for different kinds of visual
creations. I'm not wedded to any one tool in particular they all have their
strengths and weaknesses. I'll use whatever fits the task at hand and move work
between them liberally.
Here's all the apps and hardware that might be involved in a particular
creation...
None of these are affiliate links - I'm just pointing you to official sites for
more context
[9]
Workflows
And here's a couple of my common workflows for different styles of
illustrations and visuals...
1. Illustrated notes
Anything I make that has a painterly and loose hand-drawn feel was made in
Procreate on the iPad or Photoshop on the Wacom Cintiq. Or probably a
combination it's easy to move files back and forth between the two and the
tools they offer are very similar.
Illustrations like these...
Both of these applications allow you to draw in “raster” graphics, meaning you
paint pixels onto a canvas. They require a decent level of hand-skills to make
sure your lines aren't wobbly, although both applications have smoothing
features to help with that.
When I'm in Procreate I use a small selection of brushes I've gathered over the
years. It's hard for me to remember where they're all from, and I've customised
the majority of them to suit my personal prefs. Most of them were originally
from Max Ulichney's brushes. I have the essentials set ($2), the painters set
($8), and the comics set ($15), and can vouch they're all great.
I move these pieces to Photoshop if I want to work on a larger screen, or have
accidentally enlarged the canvas to a 14000px wide sprawling set of sketches
that Procreate can't open without crashing.
2. Polished vector illustrations
Illustrations that look more “polished” are made primarily in Adobe
Illustrator, with a touch of Photoshop at the end for lighting effects and
texture.
Pieces like these...
These illustrations are all vector-based, meaning we use mathematical curves to
define their shapes, rather than painted pixels. Vectors are great for create
hard, crisp edges and working with perfect geometric forms.
While I love vectors for laying down the foundation shapes of these, I'll move
them over the Photoshop once they're 90% done to adjust the colors, add more
subtlety to the lighting and shadows, and chuck a bit of texture on the top so
they feel more tangible.
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3 Backlinks
Why You Own an iPad and Still Can't Draw
The failure of drawing materials without mediums and meat
Frequently Asked Questions
Questions I am often asked to answer
The Best Illustration Books and Courses
My favourite resources for learning to draw and developing your visual thinking
skills
Mentions around the web
Tomiwa 😃
Maggie Appleton - indieweb.social/@maggie
2 Likes and Retweets
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[12][13][14][15][16]
© 2024 Maggie Appleton
• [17]The Garden
• [18]Essays
• [19]About
• [20]Notes
• [21]Now
• [22]Patterns
• [23]Library
• [24]Projects
• [25]Colophon
References:
[1] https://maggieappleton.com/
[3] https://maggieappleton.com/now
[4] https://maggieappleton.com/about
[6] https://maggieappleton.com/topics/how-to-illustrate
[8] https://maggieappleton.com/apps#im-a-promiscuous-polytooler
[9] https://maggieappleton.com/apps#workflows
[12] https://github.com/MaggieAppleton
[13] https://uk.linkedin.com/in/maggieappleton
[14] https://dribbble.com/mappleton
[15] https://twitter.com/Mappletons
[16] https://indieweb.social/@maggie
[17] https://maggieappleton.com/garden
[18] https://maggieappleton.com/essays
[19] https://maggieappleton.com/about
[20] https://maggieappleton.com/notes
[21] https://maggieappleton.com/now
[22] https://maggieappleton.com/patterns
[23] https://maggieappleton.com/library
[24] https://maggieappleton.com/projects
[25] https://maggieappleton.com/colophon