![]() ・Import 3D data to create backgrounds quickly ・Make anything from GIFs to full-length animations ・Collaborate with a team in the same project file ・Preview your webtoon on your smartphone before you publish ・Create speech bubbles, frames, and action lines with a single tap ・Gradient maps offer greater control over your colors ・Use the Sub View to import images and sample the colors ![]() ![]() ・Instantly color with the automatic AI colorizer ・Lay down flat colors with smart fill tool ・Align and distribute multiple selected objects at once ・Create layer masks to control your effects ・Set reference layers to fill effectively ・Use your fingers to adjust the line thickness and shape ・Make line art like a pro with Line Stabilization ・Import your favorite ABR Photoshop brushes ・Thousands of brushes made by creators to download ・Customize brush texture, shape, dual brush setting, edge, spray effect, and more ・Default pencils, pens, markers, pastels, watercolor, ink, oil brushes, and more ![]() Share your work easily on social media - record a timelapse of your process Thousands of user Tips available on our siteĭownload over 160,000 materials by community members Shading Assist helps you add shadows with one tapĭraw, animate, add sound, create comics, and more!įree courses on the official Clip Studio Paint website & YouTube channel Includes a customizable head model and a hand scanner that allows you to capture the shape of your hand in real-time Pose 3D models to help you draw people, animals, and objects at tricky angles Use Liquify to tweak your art after the fact Over 50,000 free and premium brushes by creators worldwide Draw as you please with Clip Studio Paint.the vector layers are really great, and for work like comic style t-shirts I usually find it really natural using vector brushes, the vector export is not all that useful, but the benefits of CSP vectors are that you can size your artwork up and still retain the quality, I usually export a high rez PNG then vector trace in either Image Vectorizer or Vecorize apps then paste into Designer (via Pub StudioLink) to finish the job off for sending to screen print, so I kind of work the old fashioned way whereas 20 years ago I would have used photoshop for any raster / painting, Freehand for all vector work and QuarkExpress for bringing it all together for output - my workflow now is mainly Publisher (as it covers most of Raster - Vector and Output) but I also use CSP for Natural feeling digi-painting or comic line work + VectorStyler for Vector stuff that Designer currently can't handle.Clip Studio Paint is the complete illustration, comic, and animation tool used by over 25 million professional and hobby artists worldwide¹. CSP is really great for digi-painting or comic type projects. I use both in my workflow, depending on the type of job. They are really pretty different kinds of apps even if they share many similar features. But when comparing ClipStudio Paint and Designer, what was said above are the major points to consider. CorelPainter does not have vector based drawing aid but as a pixel based drawing app is more versatile than ClipStudio Paint. It, too, has vector layers which basically resemble "vector" brushes of Designer (in that they are just vector-driven raster brushes), but ClipStudio has tools that allow reshaping and modifying of these strokes in many ways, and it generally works much more intuitively mimicking natural drawing (e.g., it does not clutter your canvas with separately created curve objects for each stroke yet allows to edit each segment with a node tool similarly as Designer).įor pure vector based (freehand) illustration and genuine vector brush drawings I'd choose VectorStyler (or Illustrator, if subscription is not a problem).ĮDIT: Otherwise ClipStudio Paint is much like CorelPainter and has similar natural media tools for pixel based drawing. For technically oriented jobs, and ones that would be produced for press or multiple purposes digitally (using artboards), I would choose Designer but if you draw freehand and with a pen, ClipStudio Paint is far more versatile. It much depends on what kinds of drawings you mostly create and how, and then also how you are going to produce them. Which one would you prefer to draw it in? And explain why.
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