not so much with mr. antialiasing enabled, (maybe upscale it with nearest neighbour setting, low res images get really broken with antialiasing)
not so much with mr. antialiasing enabled, (maybe upscale it with nearest neighbour setting, low res images get really broken with antialiasing)
He does not have any. Suggestions are welcome, I guess.
I have tried both, Libresprite is nice, but I am more used to working with Krita, alhough my laptop really dislikes it and heats up. Was not an issue when it was booting Linux so an OS issue I guess.
Libresprite is obviously more plug and play experience.
Krita has a decent pixel art support, but requires a bit of setup. Some tools have Antialiasing option in Tool options docker, so you may play around with that, if your selections and fills are getting messed up. It has some pixel brushes, but if you decide to stick with it for a while I would recommend making some brushes and patterns for pixelart on your own as well, just for the sake of convenience. Also make sure to customize your dockers (UI).
got me there : )
I am unfortunately so used to vim and its bindings that I suffer whenever I can’t use it. It can be really tricky to do certain operations in other editors.
I just felt that many people may get lost in it when first using it, the same way ppl get lost in vim. At least I managed to get lost in both of them when I first tried them.
Simple and gets the job done. How do you exit it though?
brutal, but works
unfortunately