Creative Workflows

Structured processes from idea to finished artwork.

What is a Creative Workflow?

A creative workflow is the sequence of steps an artist follows to complete a project. It encompasses everything from initial concept and planning, through creation and refinement, to final export and distribution.

Good workflows increase efficiency, reduce rework, and ensure consistent quality. They provide a repeatable framework that scales from quick personal projects to complex professional productions.

Universal Workflow Stages

Every Creative Project Goes Through These Phases

  1. Concept & Planning — Idea generation, research, reference gathering, storyboarding
  2. Pre-Production — Asset creation, setup, test shots, technical preparation
  3. Production — The main creation phase: shooting, drawing, animating, recording
  4. Post-Production — Editing, effects, color grading, sound design
  5. Export & Delivery — Encoding, optimization, platform-specific formatting

Workflow: Stop-Motion Animation

Pre-Production

  • Write script or outline
  • Create storyboard
  • Design and build puppets/sets
  • Test camera and lighting setup
  • Prepare DeltaSketch or stop-motion software

Production

  • Set up camera on tripod
  • Lock exposure and focus
  • Capture frames: move subject → capture → repeat
  • Use onion skinning for consistency
  • Review playback regularly

Post-Production

  • Review and delete bad frames
  • Apply color correction (BCS effect)
  • Add sound effects and music
  • Export as video (H.264, 24fps)
  • Upload to YouTube/Vimeo

Workflow: Time-Lapse Photography

Pre-Production

  • Scout location and test lighting
  • Calculate interval: (event duration ÷ target frames) = interval
  • Check battery life and storage capacity
  • Set camera to manual mode (exposure, focus, white balance)
  • Configure DeltaSketch for interval capture

Production

  • Mount camera on tripod
  • Start interval capture
  • Monitor battery and storage periodically
  • Let camera run unattended (hours to days)

Post-Production

  • Import frame sequence
  • Deflicker if needed (brightness normalization)
  • Color grade for consistency
  • Export as video at 24 or 30fps
  • Upload to social media or portfolio

Workflow: Digital Painting

Pre-Production

  • Gather reference images
  • Create composition sketch
  • Define color palette
  • Set up canvas size and resolution
  • Organize layers: sketch, color, shading, effects

Production

  • Block in major shapes and values
  • Establish light source and shadows
  • Paint mid-tones and local color
  • Refine details progressively
  • Add texture and final polish

Post-Production

  • Color correction and grading
  • Add texture overlays or effects
  • Crop and resize for target platform
  • Export as PNG (lossless) or JPEG (smaller)
  • Watermark if needed for portfolio

Workflow: GIF Creation

Pre-Production

  • Plan the loop: what action repeats?
  • Keep duration short (2–5 seconds ideal)
  • Decide frame rate: 10–15 fps for web
  • Set resolution: 480–720px wide

Production

  • Capture or create source frames
  • Apply effects if needed (DeltaSketch pipeline)
  • Trim to essential frames only
  • Ensure first and last frames match for seamless loop

Post-Production

  • Optimize: reduce colors, enable dithering
  • Test loop smoothness
  • Check file size for target platform
  • Export as GIF or convert to WebM if smaller

Workflow Best Practices

  • Name files consistently. Use descriptive names with version numbers: `project_v03_final.png`
  • Save versions. Don't overwrite. Keep `v01`, `v02`, `v03` to backtrack if needed
  • Use non-destructive editing. Adjustment layers, layer masks, and smart objects preserve original data
  • Organize assets. Separate folders for references, exports, work-in-progress
  • Test early and often. Play back animations, check video exports, preview on target devices
  • Document your process. Note settings, tools, and decisions for repeatability
  • Take breaks. Fresh eyes catch mistakes. Step away before final export
  • Back up everything. External drives, cloud storage, redundant copies

Tools That Support Workflows

Different tools excel at different workflow stages:

  • Project management: Notion, Trello, Google Sheets for tracking tasks
  • Reference gathering: PureRef, Pinterest, browser bookmarks
  • Creation: Krita, Photoshop, Blender, DeltaSketch
  • Review: Frame-by-frame playback, comparison views, version stacks
  • Export: FFmpeg, HandBrake, Adobe Media Encoder
  • Distribution: YouTube, Vimeo, Instagram, ArtStation, personal website

Getting Started with Workflows

Beginners should develop a simple, repeatable workflow:

  1. Choose your primary tool (Krita, DeltaSketch, Blender, etc.)
  2. Define 3–5 steps you always do in the same order
  3. Create folder structure: `references/`, `work/`, `exports/`
  4. Establish naming convention: `project_date_version.ext`
  5. Complete one full project using your workflow
  6. Review: what worked? what was frustrating?
  7. Iterate: adjust workflow based on experience

Workflows evolve with experience. The goal is to reduce friction between idea and execution.