![]() Why it happens this way? It is Krita's standard behaviour to create a new layer with pasted content if you paste it. This is the structure after the ctrl+C, ctrl+V, assuming you have the layer with frames 0, 1, 4, 10 and 11 (with content or blank, doesn't matter) and then you copied a fragment of frame 4 and paste it: When you are on animated layer and you copy and paste something, you get an animated layer that has three frames: beginning, blank frame (because all animated frame have the first frame, because Krita works like that it's blank and it doesn't have anything on it) then you get the frame with the pasted content, the frame is in exactly the same position where was the frame you copied it from then the blank frame where the next frame of the layer you copied it from were. (Sorry for an answer that long, but I wanted to make sure I explained it well enough I made a TL DR at the end). Just using the normal paint tools borders on more useful. ![]() I've been animating for years but no tool Ive used has had this glaring an issue. I hope to god there is something Im missing. ![]() is there a blatant solution I'm not seeing? I' m considering creating a new layer for the new part of the drawing, then erasing the parts of the old layer it's meant to replace, and then merging them down into the same layer, but this carries with it some pretty deadly consequences for making certain mistakes, being a lengthy pain in the ass aside itself. There's also no way to do this copying the frame itself, as it'll just paste things from the original frame I don't want to keep over the new drawings, which obviously I don't want. I've tried copy + pasting the area, but it creates an entirely new layer that only has, and only ever has, copied information onto the specific frame of the original drawing. The problem is, Krita doesn't seem to have a way to do this. So, I erase the whole thing on a new, draw the new bits, and then want to copy a section of the stationary parts from the previous frame. I erase the drawing on frame 2 (or just parts of it) and then want to bring back, or bring back parts of what was on frame 1 BACK onto frame 2.Īn easy example of when this could be useful: I'd like to keep part of an object stationary and the other part not stationary, but I can't tell exactly how much of it will be motile until AFTER I draw it. Let's say I copy a drawing on a layer from one frame 1 to frame 2. Im having a massively irritating problem with Krita's animation tool.
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