THANK YOU! Now it is all clear to me. Thanks for the very clear explanation.
Sorry I basically asked the same question 2 or 3 times. I just couldn't get it straight in my head.
Now I see the light!
Thanks again,
Dave.
Dave,
I'm not saying anything that Chris hasn't already said, but perhaps this
will help.
A Brush Preset contains just the information in the brush palette. This
defines the brush tip and behavior characteristics, but does not define
settings such as color, mode, opacity, or flow. When you change Brush
Presets, these other settings will not be affected and will stay the same.
A Tool Preset, on the other hand, can contain all the tool settings. For a
brush, that includes the information in the brush palette and the other
settings for the brush tool such as color, mode, opacity, and flow -- saving
the current color in the preset is optional. When you load a Brush Tool
Preset, the current brush tool settings will be replaced by the settings
saved in the preset.
Tool Presets are useful when you want to save an instance of a specific
brush.
Say you frequently use a particular brush in multiply mode with airbrush
selected and 40% flow. Save it as a Tool Preset and you can reload it with
those specific settings whenever you need it. Check the "Include Color" box
and you can even save it with a specific color. You can't do that with a
Brush Preset.
Thanks. That makes sense.
Do Brush Presets retain information (anything thats set in the Brush Palette) besides size and shape?
Dave.
I've used both successful, to save and/or load settings for a particular brush. I just can tell what the difference between using one or the other is.
A clear explanation would be great.
Let me know.
Dave.
I understand that Tool Presets can be used for things other than brushes, but what's the real advantage of using Tool Presets for custom brush settings?
Hmmm...I thought you had clarified it for me, but now I'm confused again!
Sorry. Maybe I'm just missing something.
Dave.
I just couldn't get it straight in my head.
No need to be sorry. That IS the nature of Photoshop. That's what makes it such a frustrating - yet rewarding - application.
Look, a brush preset can say "watercolor brush", but with a tool preset it can be "Soft blue watercolor brush".
Again, the tool preset saves the rest of the tool information...