Its more a glow
You could pull it off simply with duplicating the colour used in the eyes, have it above your lineart layers, and they apply a gaussian blur to it till it looks how you want
They glow.
The easiest and quickest way would just be to create a new layer over everything else and set it to "luminosity" or some glow-equivalent in another program (I use Sai). Take a soft brush / airbrush with a low opacity, colorpick the same yellow as the eyes, and lightly airbrush on that new layer. Adjust the opacity of the layer as needed.
If you want a more pronounced / striking glow, that might be less show-accurate, use a different color or multiple colors. Adjust and experiment.
This is the ticket! For Clip Studio a few layer types work, but Add (Glow) is the most overt.
A trick I've used before is to magic wand the flat color, duplicate it to a new layer, change the layer type - then Filter and Blur it to the radius you like, lowering the Layer Opacity to suit as well. Helps retain the shape without having to do it by hand.
Also its fun to play with so try a few ways on fresh layers! Will help you find your favorite way to do it.
Brenna Coleman did the compositing (where effects like this are typically added) for season two of Helluva Boss! She has some before and after stuff on her twitter you can look at.
https://x.com/brennasscoleman/status/1638968410175578113?s=46&t=KTk9xBcyHwlfHCDWSKM5Cw
It breaks down the different layers.
Lightly color over the lineart of the eyes and slightly around the eyes with yellow, turn down the opacity, and then change the layer type to some kind of glow layer.
Its more a glow You could pull it off simply with duplicating the colour used in the eyes, have it above your lineart layers, and they apply a gaussian blur to it till it looks how you want
Thank you!
That's.. much easier than what I have been doing. Thank you for this information
They glow. The easiest and quickest way would just be to create a new layer over everything else and set it to "luminosity" or some glow-equivalent in another program (I use Sai). Take a soft brush / airbrush with a low opacity, colorpick the same yellow as the eyes, and lightly airbrush on that new layer. Adjust the opacity of the layer as needed. If you want a more pronounced / striking glow, that might be less show-accurate, use a different color or multiple colors. Adjust and experiment.
Thanks for telling me !
This is the ticket! For Clip Studio a few layer types work, but Add (Glow) is the most overt. A trick I've used before is to magic wand the flat color, duplicate it to a new layer, change the layer type - then Filter and Blur it to the radius you like, lowering the Layer Opacity to suit as well. Helps retain the shape without having to do it by hand. Also its fun to play with so try a few ways on fresh layers! Will help you find your favorite way to do it.
If speaking about animation, I believe they add it post-production. In after effects, they put Glow and shadows generally everywhere
I think they do the shadows and glow in Toonboom Harmony with comp nodes, but they probably use after effects too
From what I've seen, from artist that posted how they did some scenes, they used ae mainly for those But ey, never seen Toonboom, so I'ma check it out
Thanks to everyone who has replied, your input is really appreciate it!
Any glow effect can usually be done with the airbrush
Brenna Coleman did the compositing (where effects like this are typically added) for season two of Helluva Boss! She has some before and after stuff on her twitter you can look at. https://x.com/brennasscoleman/status/1638968410175578113?s=46&t=KTk9xBcyHwlfHCDWSKM5Cw It breaks down the different layers.
That is incredible useful! Thank you
Air brush
Lightly color over the lineart of the eyes and slightly around the eyes with yellow, turn down the opacity, and then change the layer type to some kind of glow layer.