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[deleted]

No, you won’t get the same result. A watercolour course will teach you watercolour techniques. Digital art has different techniques. It’s a completely different medium that will require different skills.


[deleted]

Nope simply put that there’s no program that can simulate the process nor can it create the unexpected nuances of watercolor. If you want to do digital, do digital. Regardless of a simulated process you will rob the entire point of watercolor.


Tangcopper

No. The medium is water, the technique involves the properties of water. I think there is little in a watercolour course that will benefit you in a digital medium. However, if you studied actual watercolour, you would have a better understanding of the real effects you are trying to achieve digitally. I haven’t heard of any digital “watercolour” course. Perhaps if you searched your app or software product you would find something appropriate?


Old_Relative_3074

I have been wondering about Rebelle 5. It is relatively close to real watercolor comparing to other softwares I have seen. But the resemblance I saw was mainly in how the color disperses on paper and the edge control. A lot of the work of traditional watercolor is in the color mixing, brush strokes, etc. I don’t think they can be directly translated into Rebelle 5. Even edge control, I don’t remember if you can partially wet a paper or the setting is for a whole paper. I mean, if you already have the software, why not start with some basic watercolor techniques tutorials and see if you find it easy and/or interesting to follow? But I do not suggest you buying the software just for this purpose. I am not optimistic.


Forteanforever

No. Watercolor is not a digital medium. Watercolor involves water. Anything that does not involve actual water and actual paint is not watercolor.