The drawing colors will be white and transparency only. The drawing colors will be black and transparency only. The drawing colors will be grayscale from black to white. The drawing colors will be grayscale from white to transparency. The drawing colors will be grayscale from black to transparency. You can set drawing colors in the following ways with the black and white buttons. You can set the drawing colors using the black and white square icons. Set the drawing colors when using or basic expression colors. (4) ResolutionĮnter the resolution of the canvas or Click the drop-down button next to it to select a value. That said, If you have access to an okay laser writer, most of which have 600-1200 dpi resolution, just print out a test page, and you'll pretty much see what you get from a professionally printed book.Swaps the width and height of the canvas. Using them correctly is almost a science, and scaling screentones willk quickly get you into trouble. If you're using screentones, you really need to Google how they work with printing, so you avoid moire patterns. So try to plan ahead, and set up your comic at the size you plan to print it from the start, so you don't have to mess with scaling later on. If it's not really a problem if using vector layer for your inking, but I still try to avoid it. I always try to avoid scaling Monochrome layers if I can, even though CSP does a better job of it than most. Anti-aliasing is the gray pixels around your black lines, that make them looks nice on screens, but what happens with these if sent to a printer, is that they get rasterized (turned into a pattern of dots), resulting in fuzzy lines. You do not want any anti-aliasing going on. If you're working in black and white for print, like most manga, make sure to set all your ink layers to Monochrome. The area outside the outer most guide isn't really used, except for cutting markers, but your printer will likely put these in. The very edge of your art will very likely be cut a bit, but that's what you want. If you have artwork going all the way to the edge of the page, you must make sure it goes all the way to the outer most guide. Since cutting paper isn't a 100% exact science, you have the bleed area (space between the two outer guides), which is their margin of error when cutting. The printer will print the page at a larger size, bind your book, and cut it to to size. This makes for 4434圆343 pixel canvas, which works fine on my two, three year old ThinkPad Yoga 12, so should work on your 2017, which is significantly more powerful. Trim Size: 7" x 10" <- This is the size the book will be printerd inīleed: 0.125" <- This is the space between the outer most guidesĬanvas size: 7.39" x 10.39" <- This is the size of the whole document For instance, for the comic I'm working one, which I plan to print in 7"x10" through CreateSpace, I'm using the following numbers. Looking at your screensshot, you've got more space around the outer most guide than you really need. If you know who you're going to print through, it would be a good idea to get specs from them. (dpi = dots per inch, which is used by printer, ppi = pixels per inch, used by screens). If you're working in color 300 ppi is ok, but for black and white I would go with 600 ppi. You didn't mention if you're working in color or black and white, which is a bit significant. I'm not certain if I actually have to be working at these sizes and am just putting myself through extra work, so that's what my question is about.įor anyone that's worked on a comic book before, what sizes do you guys work at? And what do you resize to when you go to print or publish online? And also, is there a tool to quickly crop and resize your files once you're finished with your pages? The canvas is much bigger than what I'm used to working at, not to mention I'm uncertain how my linework is going to look in print currently working with brush size that's around 7.0 px wide. I chose the A4/B5 size since I figured you had to choose the same size you were gonna print at, in this case 7x10 inches. I've been working on a A4 size canvas with a B5 finish at 600 DPI for this comic. I've been working on a fanbook for some time using CSP on my Surface Pro 2017 and I need some help with formatting it, and also would appreciate some advice with brush sizes. Hello! I'd like some advice when it comes to creating comics with Clip Studio Paint!
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