aliveinHim (post: 1503132) wrote:Have you used Illustrator?
aliveinHim (post: 1503154) wrote:It seems that Photoshop is better for digital art than Illustrator.
ABlipinTime (post: 1505201) wrote:Frankly, too, I start to appreciate the art less because it's just computers doing the work for you.
ABlipinTime (post: 1505201) wrote:I don't have money for art programs. Frankly, too, I start to appreciate the art less because it's just computers doing the work for you.
ABlipinTime (post: 1506060) wrote:My biggest problem with computer art: computers programs now can get-the-gist. Have you ever watched a video of someone making something in Photoshop? All they do is use airbrushes and then hit a button that gets-the-gist (gets the idea) of what they are doing. Then voila! - The blurred areas are turned into smooth curves and shapes. Everything looks so pretty. Monet would be stunned. (He'd also become very lazy and switch to making art on the computer, if he were able to get one in the 1800s, lol.) So then I think: Okay, how is this special? You're taking advantage of a program's special algorithm. From this programmer's perspective, that algorithm is pretty sweet. From this modern artist's perspective, not so much.
ABlipinTime (post: 1506060) wrote:I already do understand (to an extent) how art programs work. And I'm a programmer who has considered (and thought through) how to make various programs for making art. It requires a different talent to use art programs than it does to draw. I'm referring, of course, to hand motion: someone who can hand draw well may not be as equally capable of drawing things on the computer.
Computer programs offer us a greater advantage over hand drawings. For one thing, they aren't messy. There's the erase button. That's fine. That's not a measure of talent. My biggest problem with computer art: computers programs now can get-the-gist. Have you ever watched a video of someone making something in Photoshop? All they do is use airbrushes and then hit a button that gets-the-gist (gets the idea) of what they are doing. Then voila! - The blurred areas are turned into smooth curves and shapes. Everything looks so pretty. Monet would be stunned. (He'd also become very lazy and switch to making art on the computer, if he were able to get one in the 1800s, lol.) So then I think: Okay, how is this special? You're taking advantage of a program's special algorithm. From this programmer's perspective, that algorithm is pretty sweet. From this modern artist's perspective, not so much.
Jingo Jaden (post: 1505264) wrote:
Radical Dreamer (post: 1506068) wrote:What feature in Photoshop is this? I've used Photoshop 6.0-CS5, and I've never seen anything that does this. The only thing I can possibly think that would even be capable of that is the new content aware feature in CS5 that's meant for editing photos, but even that isn't likely. Maybe you're talking about Live Trace in Illustrator? Which doesn't draw pictures for you, it only coverts to vectors (in ridiculously complex ways that usually isn't what you were looking for XD) pictures or shapes you inserted previously.
Either way, I don't know anyone who uses art programs in a way that "gets the gist" of what they want to do, and I'm in a program full of illustrators, graphic designers, and professors. XD All of the digital art I see is just really well done, and typically takes hours of time to do.
blkmage (post: 1506072) wrote:You're basically arguing that technology nullifies art, ... ... .
ABlipinTime (post: 1506441) wrote:I'm not saying that the art doesn't look beautiful. I'm saying that I appreciate it less because not as much talent went into it. Get the gist? - Pun intended
ABlipinTime (post: 1506441) wrote:I don't remember what program it was, I guess. I just recall seeing a video of it.
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