I also compared it to an online auto-coloring service. Cause computer screens are made of tiny squares of light where as printers print in tiny dots of ink, hence 'dots per inch'. Obviously when I heard my fave drawing program was adding some neat new features, I had to try it out. When sizing up the software has to guess and make new pixels to fill in the spaces of the original work where as when sizing down it just has to remove pixels for a tighter image.
Sizing down keeps more details than sizing up. In-between edit2: When working on art we often need to work on larger canvases to maintain the fidelity of the art.
Because it has more pixels it can handle sharper images cause it has more pixels to create the variety of hue needed to trick our eyes into seeing better clarity. the problem arises when i try to draw on CSP: the cursor is in a completely different place than the pen when on canvas. (Win10, Wacom Cintiq 13HD DTK-1301, 6.3.40-2, Clip Studio Paint) i've been trying to get split-screen to work on my cintiq, and the display works fine. I work at a minimum on canvases that are 2500 wide just to make digital art look better because there are more pixels available to support the anti-aliasing I want for smooth linework.Įdit: the reason you can see all the pixels when you zoom in is because the canvas size is very small. problems with clip studio paint and split-screen. Instead, if planning to print, as mentioned, choose A4 size in the new canvas window and set to 300 or 600 for a truly HQ print. If you print 1200x1500 at 1200 dpi (dots per inch) it would be 1 inch wide when printed at full resolution.