SharoPur on DeviantArthttps://www.deviantart.com/sharopur/art/Clover-paint-first-attempts-466625983SharoPur

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Clover paint first attempts

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Heya guys and gals.
Quite a long time ago I bought myself a galaxy note 2 with the intention to draw on it, but couldn't find an app that was right for me. I even bought a few to try their full functionality and the one that I really felt the best to work with was Clover paint. And this pic came up.
 The one on the left is the Note original and the one on the right is a bit tweaked version.
The tweak was made cos everytime I draw something on the note or the HP TC4200 for that matter it looks great, but when I put it on a desktop computer it just looks times poorer than the other ones. I tried to make it as close as what I see on the Note 2.
I guess they make new diplays focus on colors so that even a piece of crap looks awesome, which is a disadvantage if you're making the art. And I do hope to do drawing on my other utilities, not just use them as sketchbooks.
So, my question is, which one looks better to you and for what reasons?
Any other critique is also encouraged.

P.S. That girl is a new character of mine, but I forgot her name. I have it written somewhere though and new pictures of her will be with her name. :)
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© 2014 - 2024 SharoPur
Comments5
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MeMyMine's avatar
I agree with the first commenter, the right version's saturation is too high on some parts, and the darkening of the dark parts causes loss of detail there. There's also the issue of change of color- the color balance's been tweaked more to the yellow, which changes the overall mood and also the color of her clothing, which might be important character-wise. 

As of displays, I've noticed there's always disparities between them, some seem to show colors cooler (more to the blue) than others (more brownish). Check one of those calibration sites and if everything seems finely calibrated you'll just have to deal with the idea that different people will see the image slightly different based on their screen. By the way even the image viewer counts. I recently discovered that some image viewers display CMYK -mode images very differently than RGB, while others show no visible differences between the two modes. Well, usually nobody paints in CMYK unless they plan on printing the image, but still...