If you're using photoshop I can teach how sensei taught me to animate. The color on that is just a 4 color gradient :3omg, the color on that. the βcolor. you are so talented holy shit.pls teach how to gif
oh them biceps is hittinβ
lol girloh them biceps is hittinβ
your art n graphics is amazing uwulol girl
I need to start watching youtube tutorials now that I'm getting comfy with animations and stuffyour art n graphics is amazing uwu
Creating my own makes me nervous lolYou're moving in the right direction. Interested in seeing you create backgrounds instead of using entire images behind a render, or just a singular image. You'll really start to improve once you start making more creative and artistic decisions. Most of what anyone does in this style is very much at the mercy of the images they've chosen. What starts to give you an identity and style is how you start to modify and change the art you decide to use in your pieces. Taking a transformative approach will really start to take you to the next level.
Imma need another lesson on some toolsGotta take the plunge if you wanna grow.
You'll also find yourself spending more time on your pieces, which will be of great benefit. No harm in banging out quick ones to practice, but taking quite a few hours, even a day or two, to really work on something will bump up the quality of what you're doing. This will apply more to when you start doing more complex things, however. The image and gif approach you have here doesn't warrant too much time.
Like I told you before, don't just create. Take some time to look at other stuff and build a library of taste. See what you like and don't like and compile ideas that you can work into your own style. It will also help you pick up techniques, as you start to make attempts at figuring out how something was done.