Heyo. Ex-print designer here. You can do your work in RGB. RGB has a larger colour space (brighter, more colours) so you can always convert to CMYK later, but not the other way around. Also has the benefit of being smaller file size with three vs four colour channels :)
@LaumaBelska24 күн бұрын
@@BartSaysHello Hey! Thank You for the advice! 😊 About the brighter colors - since I am more focused on replicating the traditional mediums ( I have a background in traditional art), I felt like RGB kind of takes away the traditional look for my digital art.😅 I guess i have gravitated more towards the CMYK because of the different information I have gathered about this topic online😀! It felt like the safest choice, so that there wouldn’t be any color differences (from my digital art to print) , if I decide to print my work. 😊 Again, thank You for the advice!
@BartSaysHello24 күн бұрын
@@LaumaBelska Fair enough. In theory CMYK would match more closely real watercolours 👍
@alpha8here3 ай бұрын
I made sure to watch both part 1 and 2 before coming back to Part 1 to comment: I'm curious as to how you had yellow-orange color of the sunset with the dark clouds, since watercolor is usually from light to dark, from my basic understanding of traditional watercolor. Could you explain your process on how you work with layers when it comes to watercolor too? 😮
@LaumaBelska3 ай бұрын
@@alpha8here Sure! Thank You for leaving this comment here! Now I have a clearer idea of what to talk about in my next watercolor video! 😄 Theres alot of thinking thats happening before even touching the pen to the screen, so that lets me work freely without worrying about layers and blending. This way of working comes from the traditional art, so I’ll make sure to talk about this! 😊