![]() ![]() So unless people that are really knowledgeable in stabilizers, and are willing to create a topic with the maximum of points where to improve, krita will stay with the same mediocre solutions. I feel like I’m that last random user there. ![]() Usually at that last message everyone is fed up and already leave the topic, and that last message fall in deaf ears. Random user: Can anyone tell exactly what is not right? Make some video/picture of what you expect to see happening, but it doesn’t? A side-by-side how krita differs from other better stabilizers? What information or parameters are confusing? With enough information a dev or volunteer would know how to improve the code.User B: Just use Program X or Y and see for yourself.Krita evangelist C: _User B can you tell what is not working?.User B: I tried every tool, and every setting.Have you tried the Dynamic brush? It might be closer to what you want. Krita evangelist A: Krita stabilizer is what some other programs call a Pulled String smoothing, but without the visual line pulling. We should focus on the stabilizer then, what’s wrong with it? Krita evangelist B: The weighted is a common stabilizer method, with already established parameters.User A: However the weighted is useless for line art, and the stabilizer is ‘wrong’(?).It almost looks and feels like real pencil The trick for a more realistic effect is to use a dark gray color instead of pure black and a very light, low-saturated color blue as background. Krita evangelist A: Krita’s basic stabilizer is perfect for my illustrations. Here are my most-used brushes, collected from the web and tweaked a bit to my sensitivity tastes.User A: The stabilizer in Krita is odd.The endless cycle here on K-A when the stabilizer is bought up. ![]()
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