>>1362227It all depends on the effect you are looking for. I keep stressing that strokes and fills are both useful tools, depending on application. You can do strokes as thin lines, you can do fills as thin lines. The trick to them is even-ness - the more even and smooth you can make it, the less it looks like a fill.
What I do when I make a line, is I determine which would be most effective. Do I use the fill to give it unique edges or "character" or do I use the stroke, to get a better uniformity? The picture I'm adding uses both fills and strokes. Can you tell which is which? I find that you can replicate most things using fills, so I see why they are favored, but again, I have used strokes not just for ease, but because of the overall effect looked better than the fills did.
>>1362237The guy above wasn't griping or trolling - he had a valid question and was looking for insight. 8) I answered my opinion, for what it's worth, and I hope that at least one other person who has a different point posts it, so he has at least two frames of reference when he makes his decision on how to handle the lines.