Andrew Biggs
Moderator
Hi John
To this day I'm not sure if one is better than the other. They are just different and have pros and cons on both sides of the fence. There is something very tactile about holding pencils and drawing on paper. It involves texture, smell and a connection to the canvas you are working on. Sharpening pencils, cleaning erasers, different textured paper, going to the shop to buy new art supplies etc etc etc............ Digital is a bit more sterile in that sense. A bit like the difference between a paper and ink book versus a kindle. They both do the same thing and the end result is the same.......... but how you get there is a bit different.
And of course the output has changed with web graphics, electronic files and social media. So there is a lot published in the internet ether.
Quicker?.........probably, depending on the skill of the operator. But of course that is always a subjective area and hard to quantify.
Yes, there is quite a learning curve if you are unused to computer graphics work. But like anything, once you get your head around it, it's simple enough and can be learned.
One thing I do know and it's a fundamental law that hasn't changed since since Adam was a cowboy............................crap in, crap out.........regardless of the medium being used.
Cheers
Andrew
To this day I'm not sure if one is better than the other. They are just different and have pros and cons on both sides of the fence. There is something very tactile about holding pencils and drawing on paper. It involves texture, smell and a connection to the canvas you are working on. Sharpening pencils, cleaning erasers, different textured paper, going to the shop to buy new art supplies etc etc etc............ Digital is a bit more sterile in that sense. A bit like the difference between a paper and ink book versus a kindle. They both do the same thing and the end result is the same.......... but how you get there is a bit different.
And of course the output has changed with web graphics, electronic files and social media. So there is a lot published in the internet ether.
Quicker?.........probably, depending on the skill of the operator. But of course that is always a subjective area and hard to quantify.
Yes, there is quite a learning curve if you are unused to computer graphics work. But like anything, once you get your head around it, it's simple enough and can be learned.
One thing I do know and it's a fundamental law that hasn't changed since since Adam was a cowboy............................crap in, crap out.........regardless of the medium being used.
Cheers
Andrew
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