How My Digital Art Is Really Made?





I often write about why I chose digital art and why this medium expresses my emotions best. Today I want to take you behind the scenes and show how each of my projects is really created — from the first raw idea to the final polished file.

Many people think digital art is just a few clicks. Type a prompt, hit “generate”, save, done. But the truth is completely different. It’s a long, demanding process where artistic vision meets pure craftsmanship.

1. The spark and the idea

Everything starts with an impulse. Before I even turn on the computer, I need to know exactly what I want to express. I search for the core, the mood, the energy. Should it feel dark and heavy, or sharp and aggressive? Only when I feel that direction clearly, I begin shaping the structure and composition.

2. The real battle — details

When the project starts taking form, the hardest phase begins. Hours and hours of refining every tiny element. Lines that don’t sit right, composition that shifts, elements that dominate too much, margins that don’t work for print. I return to the project again and again, rejecting versions that don’t have “that something”. This brutal verification is the essence of my craft.

3. Color, light, energy

When the structure is ready, I build the final character of the artwork through color and light. Contrast, glow, depth — every reflection matters. Color isn’t just filling. It’s the main tool that sets the emotional tone.

4. Typography and final composition

The last step is merging everything into a clean, unified whole. Strong typography, precise placement, balance between text and image. Every element must have its place.

What remains at the end?

When all stages finally connect, the result is more than just a graphic file. It’s a piece of my time, energy, and stubbornness. A personal vision created for people who appreciate a heavy, uncompromising style.

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