
Create a film noir style comic reminiscent of the work of Frank Miller (Sin City) using Adobe Photoshop and Adobe Illustrator.
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25 Comments to “Noir Comic Tutorial (Part 3)”
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Create a film noir style comic reminiscent of the work of Frank Miller (Sin City) using Adobe Photoshop and Adobe Illustrator.
Rating: 5 | Views: 17205
No related posts.
@CmdrBittles
most graphic novels you see nowadays are actually photographs which are traced by artists
@1eyeisbetterthan2 They’re definitely working! Maybe check you’re using the latest version of your browser.
do these viveos not work for anyone else?
Do you have a text tutorial? I really like how you did it. What font did you use?
@cab207 Cheers, mate.
nice tut dude. you did a really good job of going step by step and keeping it simple.
@DarkRainWolf you have to make sure the image you bring in to PS is the size you want. make sure to check the size in Illustrator first. this should fix that.
@lisn92 Ah, thank you, I’ll try it :)
@DarkRainWolf this happens to me, because if im working with an A5 sheet but copy a picture from a smaller canvas it becpmes smaller because the zoom will be at 100% for both canvas’s and because the picture is on the smaller canvas it just looks bigger, if u right click with the zoom tool, and click acctual pixels it should be the same size as the big canvas, but if u click the layer that your picture is on on, then go to edit at the top and click free transform, hold shift while u resize
@CmdrBittles Yes…that’s precisely what I do with my class. I’ve had some incredible looking comics created by students using just a digital camera, Photoshop and Illustrator – all of this work from people who are convinced they couldn’t possibly create a comic because they ‘can’t draw’. Photoshop and Illustrator open themselves up to exciting possibilities in terms of creating art in this way. I’m terrible sorry that you’re disappointed but that wasn’t the purpose of the tutorials.
I think it looks awesome, but you didn’t actually draw anything…You’ve just manipulated a photograph. That was a little disappointing.
@malayrama1 In my current tutorials, I recorded the audio with a Zoom H4 so it’s very audible. Thanks for the advice, though.
Bro using premier increase the audio voice like 5 or 10 desibel its work and loud i just sujjest
Thanks! Glad you found it useful :)
This is very helpful. I’m currently taking a graphic arts class and we’re starting a new project. I’d love to try this out. Keep up the good work. =]
Nope its a seperate Adobe program (=
The logo’s a yellow/orange square with “Ai” in the middle
Really great tutorial. It helps a lot, thanks!
But when I paste a picture in my comic panel it’s much smaller than the original.
What did I wrong?
total different program, its another $700 or more if u want it.
used to make vector files, or REALLY clean lines, good for t-shirt companies, cartoonists.
HOW do u open ilustrator? its it a subprogram of photoshop cs4???
terrific. thank you.
Is there anyway to do that (or something similar) in Photoshop without Adobe Illustrator?
thanx soooo much for doing this tutorial, its very helpful! im gonna go make my comic book now!
I flipping love you, i don’t know if i will be doing black and white comics, but will be using your methods a lot thanks for uploading these great tutorials.
That’s Live Trace which is a feature of CS2 onwards. Clicking the Live Trace button converts the bitmap image into vector art. You’ll need to go into the settings to make it look good, though! Takes a little bit of tweaking to get a nice image. Good luck!
ok, sorry, I expressed myself badly. I know the art of Frank Miller, and admire a lot. What really did not understand the video is the effect of time of 1:11.
Thanks for all the answers and once again sorry my bad English.