![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjeYs7ylJO_i1wPXfTtNi6np8MJAj3WVVhcVUpiqT4xcaqUpcBhB7LMUlBztOi69_16TdmTt2tWZVTTnDn47FafVUmoA-Psj2cLCVdjtyBp95xhaUiHe4eXy70Q56IwwGPjLtArUbY0Aa6w/s320/Picture+17.png)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhA_dvlS9cHw9oN0JaQLK8bwByO4qB-S_M3D9L57hIWOSQE031JUvZURGPRkKV1WVZVRucr4o7rqvKrDgEiR7mZVgiMGrMUgA3W1D4PUUJJSwSPxF0KbWzHlDYIoeuUlBrch0KLn6rPQ34I/s320/Picture+18.png)
These are the before and after the rendering stage. After the sketch is done, then I moved to the dropping colors stage. I put the colors based on the reference picture and then create a new layer on top of the sketch and color base layers and started rendering the face details. This is another step that I'm going to put in my catalogue so everybody can understand how it works. This stage can be tricky because if you lay out the layers in the wrong way, it will be harder to get this outcome. I've tried some tricks and I think this is the best way to get a good outcome of the rendering quality. I want to explain more about how to render it properly but I thought it will be too complicated and the catalogue space is limited so I'm just going to put the important bits such as how to change the brush settings, opacity, and laying out the layers.
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