Yes, you can't be a mangaka if you do not know how to draw freehand. This is because when making the story board you need to draw the rough and then the other details that involve making the manga. Sorry if this was a long answer but i hoped it helped.
Yes of course. You must also have your own style.
(from the asker of the question: I meant do they only use freehand?)
HP TouchSmart tm2
You could not do 3-D animation the way they do if you were hand drawing it. They use a program called Renderman to make their movies and short films.
Photorealism was created as a result of the widespread use of Photography.
It is a lot easier and quicker. Especially if scientists cannot draw (like me)
doggy style
freehand - is a technique of making a drawing without the use of drawing instrument mechanical - is a technique of making a drawing with the use of drawing instrument
freehand - is a technique of making a drawing without the use of drawing instrument mechanical - is a technique of making a drawing with the use of drawing instrument
Anything that you didn't trace or use tools like rulers, french curves... is technically considered "freehand." Freehand is distinguished from Technical Drawing.
To express how one feels without a subject is deeply personal and as the way someone free hand draws is a way to express their life everything they have done through out their life has shape their style and subject of free hand drawing to express their self with only what they see in their minds can have a impact on people lives free hand drawing can show skills and craftsmanship in drawing without other methods of drawing
A freehand drawing is simply a drawing done by hand without the use of tools or aids such as templates, stencils, tracing, etc.
Drawing usually refers to what an artist or designer does using pencil or ink or digital tools such as Adobe Photoshop or Illustrator and can be all freehand. Drafting usually is an exacting mechanical drawing or Computer Assisted Drafting (CAD) that is meant to be an aid to architectural building as a scale drawing or a scaled blueprint for manufacturing and sometimes using CAD programs such as AutoCAD.
When using free hand it may take more time we want correct location free spaces tools for drawings while using mechanical we use to draw by some software with out tools all the tools are in that software less space comfortable work can do
Free hand drawing is expressing how one feels without the use of an subject, drawing from the heart and mind what one feels. subject drawing is usually first stage of drawing where once must practise his or her skill on a subject to master the median and the crafted before one can truly draw with meaning and can understand on how to express one self or free hand drawing could refer to artist drawing without methods of capturing a subject like copying or grid method "try drawing free hand without copying"
Anything that you didn't trace or use tools like rulers, french curves to achieve is technically considered "freehand." Technical drawing employs tools like T-squares and architect scales in order to produce detailed and technically accurate drawings of things like machine parts or Plumbing schematics. It demands absolute precision. Freehand drawing, on the other hand, has a completely different set of priorities and objectives. It relies upon the more intuitive way of achieving proper (or desired) proportions ("eyeballing it")
You Practice, practice, practice, until you are a perfect drawer. Find your style for drawing and use it. Getting a couple of drawing books, doesn't hurt, either.
FreeHand is the easiest AND quickest to use. please see demonstration here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6f8CKjsYS9k FreeHand was for many years sold and developed by Macromedia, who were fairly recently bought by Adobe. Who make Illustratrator, Illustratrator, has the greatest number of facilities BUT, is not nearly as easy to use. Illustratrator is also the most expensive and uses the most RAM & Processor of the 3. CorelDraw is kind of in the middle on all fronts except ability where Freehand still has the edge. Unfortunately Adobe is in an ongoing dispute with those who have historically always used FreeHand about product support and their refusal to continue development of FreeHand. Adobe want everyone to move over to illustrator, even though it is totally unsuitable for many users lacking crutial features needed by many of the historical FreeHand users. If you are a FreeHand user in need of excellent support go to this site: http://freefreehand.org/ This is the official website, created by FreeHand users themselves, which is also engaged in the fight to give this excellent software a future.
Freehand