Go full painter and then make it work for web, print, animation or whatever format you need afterwards. But don't hobble your creative talents just because the tools changed and/or got worse. raw files, as well as other popular image formats right in your browser. Some users even call it a Photoshop Online Editor because you can edit. This is a free image editor with limited simple functions that you can use online. If you have a graphics department who can clean it up into vector, like us, all the merrier. No, it is not the Online Photoshop version. But as a workflow for an artist who wants to use a lot of different brushes and paint anything on the fly, I think it's worth the clean-up. It has its limitations just like Flash did (it was very hard to change brush strokes with hundreds of vector points in Flash - it's very hard to get exactly the right crispness without too many vector points when going from raster to vector for an iPad drawing). ![]() The artist we work with now does all his stuff on an iPad with a pen, at super high resolution in pixels, and then converts the pen strokes to vector as needed. ![]() ![]() ![]() This was something I always found weird coming from Illustrator, but Flash animators absolutely loved the way it worked. I think what you're talking about is the way it outlined all your ink strokes into outlined vectors as you drew them. I know this has been answered now, but as someone who worked with a lot of Flash artists for animation back in the day.
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