Best products from r/IDAP
We found 24 comments on r/IDAP discussing the most recommended products. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 31 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.
1. Little People: A Fantasy Story About Fathers, Sons, and Monsters
- Thames Hudson
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2. Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain: The Definitive, 4th Edition
- Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain, 4th Edition - Paperback
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3. Color and Light: A Guide for the Realist Painter (Volume 2) (James Gurney Art)
- Andrews McMeel Publishing
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5. School Smart 8-1/2 x 11 in Copier Film Without Sensing Strip, Pack of 100, Transparency - 079880
Sold as a Pack of 100 SheetsDesigned for use with overhead projectorsCompatible with copiers, but not recommended for inkjet printersEconomical and long lastingCreate lesson plans or notes using dry-erase markers
6. Krylon K01303A07 Crystal Clear Acrylic Coating Aerosol Spray, 6 Ounce
Crystal clear acrylic coating spray provides a permanent protective gloss coating that will not yellow with ageMoisture resistant and smudge proofUse for photography, watercolor, charcoa pencil, painted surfaces, wood crafts and much moreComes in 6-ounces aerosol can
7. Minwax 63010444 Fast Drying Polyurethane Clear Finish, quart, Satin
Provides long-lasting beauty and protection to any interior wood surfaceAmong the most durable coatings for wood protectionIdeal for woodworking, furniture, doors, cabinets and floorsCan be used on both finished and Unfinished woodIt provides long-lasting protection and beauty to interior wood surfa...
8. Walnut Hollow Creative Versa with Versa Variable Temperture Control & 11 Points (Tips)
- Wood burning tool with variable temperature control and 11 points: Cone Point; Shading Point; Universal Point; Mini Universal Point; Tapered Point; Calligraphy Point; Hot Knife Point; Soldering Point; Stamping Point; Flow Point; and Mini Flow Point
- Tool features a comfort grip for extended use and a stand to protect your worksurface from heat
- Includes storage case and complete instructions
- Comes with lead-free solder for use with the soldering point
- Recommended for ages 14 and up with adult supervision; 120 Volt/25 Watts; UL approved for USA and Canada
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9. Figure Drawing: Design and Invention
- 180 days zero lemon guarantee warranty with amazon 30 days full refund guarantee; longest warranty period in market; 24 hours / 6 days a week support; 100% zero defect guarantee
- Black Color full edge wrap TPU case-in-one construction built to endure hard drops & Heavy shocks. No more brittle back covers that offers no protection to your Phone
- Full NFC support for s beam and Google wallet
- Direct battery discharge design to provide absolute power efficiency. External battery waste 30-40% through USB cable and voltage Conversion
- Compatible with Galaxy S5 models except S5 active or S5 Sport. Largest capacity battery in the world guarantee
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10. Artograph LightTracer Light Box 10 in. by 12 in
Great for crafters of all artsComfortable slanted work surfaceBrilliant LED illuminationBuilt-in storage tray and a 12 volt power adapterMade in USA
11. Our Fathers' Godsaga: Retold for the Young
- Single piece
- Black-painted metal
- Optimized for use with OCZ SSDs
- Compatible with 2.5-Inch and 3.5-Inch solid state drives
- Fits in standard 3.5-Inch desktop dock bays
- Compatible with 2.5-Inch and 3.5-Inch solid state drives
- Optimized for use with OCZ SSDs
- Fits in standard 3.5-Inch desktop dock bays
- Black-painted metal
- Single piece
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12. Faber-Castel Eraser Pencils, 2-Pack, Multicolor
- FABER-CASTELL-Eraser Pencils
- These pencils are perfect for erasing unwanted marks fine point erasing and also creating unique eraser effects
- Erases black-lead color pencils and charcoal
- This package contains two eraser pencils
- It is an imported item
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13. Anatomy for the Artist
- Samsung Galaxy Fit S5670
- LCD Screen Display Glass Lens
- Mobile Phone Repair Part Replacement
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14. Prismacolor Premier Ebony Graphite Sketching Pencils, Jet Black, Extra Smooth, Dozen - 14420
Product SKU: SAN14420Large core diameter provides jet black, extra-smooth linesThin barrelStrong tip
15. Wacom Bamboo Capture Pen and Touch Tablet (CTH470)
- Edit digital photos, paint and draw with the natural feel of a pen on paper
- 4 Express Keys for quick shortcuts and a pressure sensitive pen
- Active Area: 5.8 inch x 3.6 inch
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16. Bridgman's Complete Guide to Drawing from Life
- Squier by Fender Electric Guitar with Red Finish
- Basswood body, 25.5-Inch scale length, 42 mm nut width
- Maple c-shape neck with Rosewood fingerboard, 21 medium jumbo frets, and Dot position inlays
- 5-way selector switch, Synchronous tremolo bridge, 3 single-coil pickups: 1 master volume, 2 tone controls
- Includes: Stand, Strap, Strings, Hard Case, Tuner, Pick Sampler & Online Lesson
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17. Sakura 37488 Gelly Roll Classic 08 (Medium Pt.) 3PK Pen, White
- 0.8mm Point Size for Medium Writing
- Bright, White opaque ink
- ideal for dark or colored paper
- Pack contains 3 Each Gelly Roll White 08 (Medium)
- Gelly Roll Classic White is available in 05 (fine), 08 (medium), 10 (bold)
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I’m an author and illustrator and this is my first published novella. The cover is a illustration from the second chapter of the book. If you’re intrigued by the cover, check out the novella! It’s typically priced at 2.99, but it’s currently on sale for 99 cents.
My title is practically a novella on it’s own, but below is a slightly more in-depth description of the story, and some excerpts from some of the early reviews.
Little People: A Fantasy Story About Fathers, Sons, and Monsters is a 20,000 word YA fantasy adventure story that will appeal to readers of all ages. It deals with some pretty large (and small) themes, and just a heads up—it‘s a little dark. In it, a town is terrorized, an adult makes a terrible choice, and a child is badly hurt—and that’s just the first chapter. Things get even wilder after that.
Below is the title and plot description.
Little People: A Fantasy Story About Fathers, Sons, and Monsters by Daniel Charles Wild
Five days after his estranged father’s funeral, a young man is visited in his apartment by two tiny figurines from the father’s basement model train diorama.
They are desperate for help and claim that their world is in terrible danger. Their sun has been out for a week, the train has stopped running, and an unstoppable monster from the outside world has gotten into the basement.
This is a wild adventure that may or may not be true about a son’s discovery of and quest to save the hidden world his mysterious father left behind.
Here’s what early reviewers have to say about Little People:
“Swept away. Powerful and lovely tangle of imagery and emotion."
“...a deeper story about memory, braveness, and forgiveness."
“Found myself unable to put it down."
“...it embodies all of the aspects that make a story worth reading."
“A story of misunderstanding and hurt followed by forgiveness and redemption."
“Gulliver meets Through the Looking Glass, but with more blood!"
If you like fantasy that has a heart and deeper message, you might enjoy “Little People.” On one level it’s a adventure story about a family, hidden worlds, and monsters. On another, it’s about how memories mislead, courage comes in all sizes, and how seeking to understand and forgive can be the greatest quest of all.
Most of the first chapter is free on Amazon. Let me know what you think! If you enjoy the story, please consider leaving a review. Reviews help increase the book’s visibly in the Kindle store, and let other readers know if it’s worth checking out.
Here’s a link to the novella on Amazon.
Here’s my about the author blurb: Daniel Charles Wild is an author and illustrator who lives inside his head. Little People: A Story About Fathers, Sons, and Monsters is his first published novella. It’s not the first story he’s written though, and it won’t be the last.
Thanks dude! And, yeah that's an awesome design, I think it'd make a cool deck too.
I'll let you in on a secret that took me forever to figure out: the best way to make masking / stencils is to get yourself some transparency sheets, like the kind used for overhead projectors in school, and then take a marker and draw what you want to spray through (best way to make stencils). Then take a 'wood burning kit' (which is just a low-heat soldering gun pretty much) and use it to "trace" your lines on the transparancy sheet, do it light and quick and it'll cut the parts out that you want - afterwards you'll be left with a mask or stencil that's much stronger than paper, easy to clean, and the wood engraver allows you to make more detailed and smoother cuts than if you were masking with tape, or cutting out of cardboard or card stock.
When you finish your painting, you'll want to give it a light coat of clear spray finish, and when that dries hit it with a coact of actual clear coat - I use minwax - that''s 'satin' (which is their way of saying 'matte') listed there but I prefer mine to be gloss. It's important that you hit it with the spray finish first, because it'll seal the paint, and the minwax may cause it to run if you don't. I use a lot of markers in my paintings and minwax will absolutely make them bleed and run if I don't seal them first.
You also want to seal it because the acrylic will easily chip off the deck
Like I said, also be aware that painting on a deck is A LOT different than painting on canvas, the deck will cause the acrylic to paint much faster than canvas so you lose that 'wet period' you normally have to blend paint.
Good luck, post a picture when you finish it! And feel free to drop me a line if you have any other questions.
Ah that's sweet, but you know what, light and color is a super complex subject...it's something I struggle with too every time I make a new painting, so don't be discouraged! If you haven't read Color and Light book by James Gurney, I would HIGHLY recommend it! https://www.amazon.com/Color-Light-Realist-Painter-Gurney/dp/0740797719/ref=sr_1_1?crid=1IXNICKVA7KDK
Haha I'm sure you're better than you think you are -- just keep at it! Thank you a ton! =)
A nice firm attempt! Its promise that will time and effort you can become good at this. Next time go at it with more aggressive darks and just have fun with the medium. Charcoal will make rich deep blacks. Consider using a charcoal stick or even vine charcoal for larger shapes. Its a common early mistake to be too light.
While you have a nice sense of shape and are drawing some of hatching around the form, but the torso lacks the sense of anatomy even a very "soft" woman would have.
If I would error, its better to over define form and anatomy and soften everything out than to try and add form to something that doesn't have it.
http://www.amazon.com/Figure-Drawing-Invention-Michael-Hampton/dp/0615272819 I also heartily recommend this book to anybody serious about figure drawing. Mind you the book is targeted at the intermediate artist, which is really, figures are an intermediate to master level subject.
The reason is, even from direct reference, drawing people requires one to "construct" the figure so they can create the needed sense of presence and form a real person has. That book is probably one of the best I have on the topic (and I have like 30)
For subject matter in the future I would focus on working with reference that has a figure from head to toe so you can work in over all proportions. The REALLY rough and dirty is that a human is 7.5 "heads" tall, the crotch is near the 1/2 way point of the whole figure, and the hands should roughly match the size from chin to eyebrows. Elbows should match bottoms of the rips and wrists fall at the crotch when standing.
That and have at it. "Beating your head against the wall" aka doing a LOT of practice is the only way to improve. Thus don't overly invest in any one drawing, and make sure you have fun. Art is all about enjoying the journey not the end result.
The proportions are perfect. Probably because it was traced, but the drawing lacks soul. The contrasts are off. The line quality is poor. All in all it probably still took you a long time and the practice will pay off down the road.
I suggest paying more attention to the subtle changes to the contour of your subject. A great drawing or painting also has good contrast transitions aka shading. Pay very close attention to the transitions from light to dark... especially subtle transitions.
Keep practicing my friend. This painting was only a stepping stone.
A great book that helped me a bit is Drawing with the right side of your brain.. Give it a read over and then get back to drawing. :]
A demigoddess alights on the mortal plane to appraise a newly emerged deity.
This was a book cover I drew for 'The Counterfeit God' by Nikolaas Liquette. I'm really happy to finally share this finished piece now that the first book of 'The Fate of the Pantheon Rebellion' trilogy is published.
If you're interested in a good epic-scale fantasy read this weekend, you can get a digital copy of the book here:
https://www.amazon.com/Counterfeit-Fate-Pantheon-Rebellion-Book-ebook/dp/B07W95TD24/ref=sr_1_2?keywords=counterfeit+god&qid=1565814287&s=books&sr=1-2
There's also a paperback version as well. I know, because I formatted that cover too. :P
www.reddit.com/r/TheFoxBriar
I have a tablet but my light table is just a small portable one kind of like this ! ( http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000KNHRH6/ref=pd_lpo_sbs_dp_ss_2?pf_rd_p=1535523702&pf_rd_s=lpo-top-stripe-1&pf_rd_t=201&pf_rd_i=B005OM0D9W&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_r=05WG1SDT378CQCK4YDAB ). Cleanness is also overrated , i love rough loose sketches ! those tend to be my fav :) !
Woah, this reminds me a lot of the artwork in Our Father's Godsaga. Especially the awesome picture of Fenrir.
Great picture! Thanks!
Thank u :3
I don’t erase the guide lines, this drawing was done without an eraser or ruler. I’m trying to play with pencils’ tonality. As an example first I draw the outline with a HB, if I do some mistakes I go over it with B or press harder on the HB.
When I’m doing a non technical drawing and I need an outline I do a basic pencil sketch and the trace it.
The red pencil idea is good if u plan to process ur work digitally.
Also u can use different types of erasers, there are some that look like a pencil ( https://www.amazon.com/Faber-Castell-185698-Faber-Castel-Pencils/dp/B005M4LAUS ) or are soft like dough ( https://www.ebay.com/itm/Soft-Rubber-Kneaded-Eraser-Wipe-Highlight-Art-Sketch-Painting-Correction-Tools/233278662189?_trkparms=ispr%3D1&hash=item36507de62d:g:nGEAAOSwglJdHNfj )so u can mold it as u wish to get more precision.
Overall, with time u won’t need an eraser.
My best advice to you is to practice drawing from life, a lot. There are also a couple of books I recommend, Anatomy for the Artist and Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain. Anyone who wants to make a graphic novel, regardless of their chosen style, should put in lots and lots of hours of drawing nude models in dynamic poses. Find an artists co-op in your area that meets regularly with life models and practice, practice, practice.
Thank you so much! I used Prismacolor Premier ebony graphite sketching pencils. I bought a couple of them on a whim the day before I started this portrait knowing I wanted a lot of contrast and they were awesome. They're the smoothest graphite I've used so it was incredibly easy to blend. I seriously can't recommend them enough. You can get a dozen for about $9 here. You can also see my progress pics on my Instagram, @artbydanielleg, so you can see how it came together.
If this is your first attempt to step away from outline work I think you're doing a great job! I would maybe work your light and shade relationships to define the forms a bit more, but that may be a style choice on your part so disregard if so. Also, the brain looks a little flat compared to the rest of the piece. Get it a little wet?
I would also recommend getting ahold of James Gurney's book Color and Light. It was really helpful when I was trying to get away from outline work and I still reference it all the time. He explains things more with theory than being medium specific.
I'm still learning. I hope to someday be able to afford a drawing tablet like this. I'm sure I could improve the quality when I get it. I started with a pencil sketch and then went over it with a marker and crayons.
If you can afford to purchase one, get a copy of Bridgman's Anatomy book. Try abebooks.com for a used one (it's 350 pages or so, make sure you get the big book).
Get yourself some tracing paper, too, and trace the book 2-3 times. You'll see solutions to anatomy and plane problems a lot easier once your hand/brain connection (from all the tracing) has been trained a bit more. Tracing helps a ton.
In terms of the 3rd and 4th drawings, remember that sometimes, less is more.
Keep up the great work!
White gel pen
They’re pretty easy to use for bright highlights
I love it! It reminds me of this Schiele painting :)
Most of what I know I have learned through trial and error. The class I am currently taking is my first and it focuses on basics (which has nothing to do with digital art unfortunately - I was hoping it would /sadface )
I do use a tablet. The program is PS CS6 (student edition is cheaper - or buying it from a friend who never openned theirs). I don't know if there are any classes that teach digital art (though there are a ton of books) but I know there are a lot of ambitious youtube artists that put in time teaching tips and tricks. Kienan Lafferty is one I watch a lot. I also tune into Dave Rapoza and Anthony Jones's livestreams.
Thank you so much :D
this covers the difference between male and female facial features briefly, but well. You can get it anywhere (used in most cases) and it's got a lot of other good info in it.
The nose is really the only critique I have about the drawing, overall it looks phenomenal.