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Ah, that would make sense. Always have Anti-aliasing set to OFF when using tools, because it gives you very little control over the AA you get. It's always better to do AA by hand if your goal is a clean pixel art image.
Since you used dirty tools, it's quite likely that your image will not be approved if people notice that you used dirty tools.
no antialiasing tools... I did a selection fill for elements in the glass which gave a one pixel antialiasing. I think there must still be a load of glitched pixels still in the black/dark areas. tbh im looking forward to just starting fresh on my next peice... with a VERY limited palette! lol. Is my piece not going to be approved because of this?
Next time, just edit your submission instead of making a new one :]
The new one is better, but it still has a very large number of colours compared to how it looks. Did you use some fuzzy/anti-aliased tools, perhaps?
I think so. Awhile back I saved the it as a JPEG by mistake and I just noticed now that there where a ton of glitched pixels in the image (cause by the compression?). Either way; fixed it now. Deleted and resubmitted image (to ensure its the new one). Is that better?
Did something go wrong while saving this image? It looks like pixel art, but has 514 colours, the majority of which are used only for 1-2 pixels each and are redundant with other colours in the image.
Thanks for the advice, eishiya. Pixel art is proving to be a very different beast from other mediums I've worked with in the past. But damn it I have admired it from afar for too long! I WILL master it! lol