Hello there! Sorry that I just now got around to this. I use two brushes,
One is the standard transparent watercolor tool that you get when first downloading clip studio paint/manga studio 5
This is the one I usually use for painting and more finished looking pieces.
The second one is a brush I downloaded from the asset store for clip studio called bv_bristle_1
I use this for pretty much everything else and use this for my askblogs.
I would say that it does affect my art in some ways. The watercolor makes it look more shiny and softer, but you have to be really steady handed with it. The other brush gives my art a nice rough look while being forgiving if you mess up linework or coloring in some areas.
Sometimes you set up a brush the exact right way, and you never want it to change. Clip Studio Paint has two handy options for you when it comes to this. One of those ways even reverts the brush to your default settings as soon as you use a different tool. Keep reading below the cut to find out about these two settings.
I get asked often what kinda brushes I use to paint. I tweak the default
brushes on Clip Studio Paint but feel free to adjust them accordingly
to suit your style!
whenever a celebrity or someone i know overdoses i always think about that study they conducted on rats in the 70s which showed that addiction isn’t some moral failing nor is it an uncontrollable monster that takes over your brain – it’s a major symptom of complete loneliness and mental isolation and the most important antidote is genuine human connection and stimulation
I present to you a – probably quite incomplete, I’m sure I’m missing a lot of speech sounds – reference list and a bit of a guideline for the different ways one can describe the sounds your characters make whilst writing smut. I’ll definitely be referring to it, because I sometimes get stuck on exactly how to describe a particular noise. (aka, “he can’t groan again, he just groaned last paragraph”)
Combine a descriptor and a sound for best effect – for example, “needy moan,” “pleased hum,” or “sudden scream.” You can even use two: “low, rough grunt,” “sweet little cry,” “desperate, filthy noise,” as long as you don’t repeat a word that means the same thing, unless you really want to emphasize it. Avoiding repetition is pretty key here. You don’t usually want to say “hushed, quiet gasp” except on rare occasions when it’s very important how soft the sound was.
Use your own common sense, as well; some sounds and descriptors don’t generally work well together. “Deliberate shriek” probably wouldn’t work well, and neither would “languid grunt,” but again, this is all very situational – play around! Have fun.
Feel free to add to my lists, use for your reference or pass them around. It would be fun to see a randomized generator made, too, I’m just too lazy to do it myself. 😉