Thread:Boomdodger/@comment-3298705-20160315221249/@comment-5148107-20160315233314

Thanks! And I can definitely do that, I do not think you are being greedy at all, lol! I can give you a tutorial in this post right now, but I will need to know what you would like. I am not going to make tons and tons right now, however, 3 at the most, probably. Just note that anything too advanced I will probably be unable to do, because those do not turn out the best, in my opinion.

Anyway, here is my tutorial, step-by-step version!

1. I go on the internet and search up the specific clone trooper that I would like to edit. I am going to use Wolffe as my example. Once I find the picture that I want and best fits to what I need, I save the picture and then open it in GIMP - you can use Photoshop or something else liek Paint.net if you would like, either works.

2. For Wolffe, I would start by making the gray parts white. This includes the shoulderpads - which I honestly hate doing!- the top half of the chestpiece, helmet, and parts on his arms.

3. I take my color, so if I were making a Boomdodger pic, I would use the right shade of blue, and then in a layer above, I paint over where I want the armor paint to be. Before I start painting, I lower the opacity of the layer to around 50% - I use GIMP, put it at whatever 50% is for your painting software - so that it blends in with the shading underneath. Don't worry about  getting the paint over the armor, because in the next step I erase the paint that I drew "over the lines."

4. Sometimes, depending on how shadow-heavy the core picture is, I select an area of paint using the free-select tool, and then I lower the darkness level to match what it is in the picture. Depending on whether or not I use a blurry-edged brush, or a non-blurry-edged, I also give the paint a blur, so that it matches the armor.

5. I do a few other touch-up things, and that is pretty much it!

I hoped that helped you! If you need anything else described more clearly, please don't hesitate to ask!