Postby Kireihana » Sun Oct 24, 2004 3:24 pm
Ok then! These tools are for the Paint BBS and Paint BBS animation programs (I've never used Oekaki BBS).
The first button says "Solid" when you start. That means that you will be drawing with solid-color lines. If you click on the button, it changes to "Watercolor." This makes soft, slightly opaque lines. If you click on it a second time, it becomes "Text." This, of course, allows you to add text to your picture.
The next button has a lot of options. First it says "Halftone," which produces manga-like screentones. Click on it and it becomes "Blur," which is self-explanatory- it blurs things together. Click on it again and itd says "Light," which lightens things. Click on it a final time and it says "Dark," which darkens. In other programs the Light and Dark functions are known as "Dodge" and "Burn."
The next button creates shapes. "Rectangle" creates a solid rectangle, "LineRec" creates a rectangle outline, "Oval" makes a solid oval, and "LineOval" makes an oval outline.
Now the next button can be a little complicated. "Copy" is easy enough; you select part of the image to copy it, and then can drag the copy and place it elsewhere on the canvas. "LayerUnif" condenses the selection onto one layer, depending on which layer you use it on. "Antialias" blurs the selection slightly. "FlipHoriza" flips the selection horizontally, and "FlipVertic" flips the selection vertically. "Rotate" rotates the image 90 degrees to the right.
The next button is the eraser tools. Plain "White" lets you erase with a brush. "WhiteRec" erases a rectangular selection (good for erasing large areas). "Clear" erases EVERYTHING, so be careful with it.
Now for the line-style tools. "Freehand" lets you draw, uh, freehand. "Line" makes a straight, point-to-point line. "Bezier" makes curved lines.
The next button comes in very handy. The default setting is "Normal," which doesn't affect your image in any way. "Mask" makes it so you can't color over the active color (to select an active color, right-click on it. The default active color is black.) It is useful to use the "Mask" tool on your lineart color. The next tool, "Remask," makes it so you can ONLY color on the active color. A good example to use this is if you want to change the color of your lineart. "And" colors underneath colors with a lower hue than the active color, and "Divide" colors over colors with a higher hue. (Very confusing. I never use "And" or "Divide.")
Finally, done with buttons! Now you have the transparency (or "opacity") bar. Use this to change the transparency settings on practically anything- your brush, eraser, or the intensity of tools such as Blur, Darken, Lighten...
Next is the size box. Use it to change the size of your brush and stuff.
Then you'll see 3 little boxes. If you right-click on one of them, it will save your current tool - size, color, opacity settings and all. Left-click on it and you are ready to use the tool again!
Last is the layer selector. "LayerBG" is the background layer, and "LayerFG" is the foreground layer. Be careful when toggling layers because sometimes it's easy to forget and start drawing things on the wrong layer (<-- does this all the time ^^;; )
Well, that's about it. I'm sorry that it's so long; I tried to be concise... If you have any more questions feel free to ask. ^^