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I was asked to try and explain this, so here I am!

Basically, this is my quick method for cleaning scanned black and white drawings, I remember doing this a lot during inktober season haha.

Now alright, I... I hope I don't sound too confusing when I try to explain these things, I'm sometimes not using the correct terms and this comes all from personal experience.
So I encourage to try this on your own when following these steps~!

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joel3d

Thank you Paroro, I really enjoy seeing your work. This lesson reminded me of something I used to teach Photoshop students regarding working with line art or more specifically pencil or charcoal drawings and preserving all the beautiful subtle textures of those media. <a href="http://www.joel3d.com/Coloringtutorial.htm" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank">http://www.joel3d.com/Coloringtutorial.htm</a> I apologize if this is intruding your art-space, and that It is nearly 20 years old.

Kage Ryu 「カゲリュ」

Huh. I've always used levels to clean up lineart when I scan stuff (or sketches, for that matter), but I didn't know you could eyedrop things directly. I've always manually moved the levels on the slider until it looked okay, but I'll have to give the eyedropper a shot next time. Thank you for sharing this!