I have the Mr. Natural Brush by Kyle T Webster for Photoshop [ ] and would like to use it in toon boom, and I was wondering if I just had to import the brush texture, or if there was a way to get all the brush settings into toon boom to make its own brush preset.
When I select the mixer brush, and then choose a brush tip from the brush preset menu, the tool will change to the brush tool as soon as I select the new tip. This doesn't happen with every brush (for example, i can change to a standard photoshop brush), but not a Kyle brush like the one below. As soon as I select the new
As soon as I select the new tip, the mixer tool will change to the standard brush tip. This does not happen in CC 2017. I am able to use the same kyle brushes without issue. I suspect something is awry with the way brushes and tool presets are sort of the same thing now? So when i am picking a new brush tip, it has the tool info with it? Please help if i am doing something wrong.
Thank you for your reply... This may work when i am creating a brush, but it seems almost every brush I used to have was maybe created with the setting checked (or before it existed)? Either way, using almost all of my existing imported brushes no longer works with the mixing brush or smudge tool. there doesn't seem to be a way to edit them either.
Yes, that did work, thank you. This is a good work around, but i can't duplicate every brush... Also there is no way of knowing which brushes will work (i.e. which were created with the Include Tool Settings box checked) until you select them. This problem did not exist in cc 2017.
I'm trying to change skin color in photoshop to something more pale. I've heard adding a layer and setting it to 'hue' does this, but when I try, the change is absolutely minimal. To see if I was wrong, I tried painting over the shirt in the photo, and it didn't change at all, either.
I'm very new to photoshop (as in, I started today) so I'm really not sure what I'm asking or what's 'broken'. The hue blend tutorials I've seen don't work the same way for me as they do in the tutorial.
"Color" has three components, hue, saturation, and value (or luminance or brightness). If you want stronger impact, change the blend mode of that layer to "Color" which will bring in the other missing components, saturation and value. Also keep in mind that you will not be able to do certain things with only this, like making a dark, tanned skin blond. This method is also a good way to even the skin tones instead of changing them. In case you missed, I mentioned to change the blend mode of the "layer" rather than the brush. This technique is best used on a blank layer with its blend mode set to "Color" rather than directly brushing on the image.
Hello! I'm an illustrator who uses Photoshop, and seeing as how I use the 'Clear' brush mode so much when painting, I was wondering if there's a hotkey I can assign to it so I can easily switch between modes (rather than hitting the drop down menu every time)?
If i go into Photoshop -> Filter menu, there is a quite a large list of filters i can apply to an image. I would like to be able to apply these filters not to the whole image but to a part of it by painting on this image with a brush.
To my knowledge you can't put a filter on a brush in Photoshop. A brush can have different textures, sizes and other options. A filter acts on the whole picture or your can make a selection first and then restrict the filter to only that selected part.
If you don't want to use selection tools to set the selection consider doing a Quick Mask. With Quick Mask, you can use a brush to "paint" an overlay of mask over the area to be selected. Then apply the filter(s) as needed.
I'll often use a combination of tools. Free form lasso or magnet lasso to get a general selection of the image area. Quick Mask mode and round hard brush to clean up the selection. Note Quick Mask works with black or white. Painting black adds to the selection, white removes from it.
I decided to make a new brush from scratch but I'm having quite some problems with the setting. Here are the custom brushes i made an as you can see they only go in one direction, no matter if i make my brush strokes go up down left or right (i don't know if i'm making any sense sorry if i'm not; hope the arrows help) see the image below.
As you can see the direction of the brush changes whit the direction that I'm making the strokes. I tried to compare the brush settings of my brushes and the downloaded ones, but i' can't seem to figure out what setting makes them go in an infinite loop.
No matter where you get the brushes, the first thing you have to do when installing any new brushes is download and save the .ABR file. You can find this Keith Haring set of brushes here.
Open a new blank file and start experimenting with the brushes. There are 37 different brushes in the Keith Haring brush set. Some make drips, some look like chalk, some like spray paint. One thing you might want to do is change the brush icons to text descriptions. With the Keith Haring brush set, the text is much more descriptive.
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I find that the best use of this brush is small and subtle, with enough contrast for it to be noticeable, but not too distracting. I usually select a color or shade from within the image to help the signature appear more organic and less out of place. You should also experiment with adjusting the opacity of the brush until you find a combination that suits you.
My set of Photoshop Dry Brushes contains 53 high resolution brush presets made with real paint. Each brush features an authentic texture with wispy lines and rough edges, making them perfect for creating realistic painted effects, or distressing your artwork by applying the brushes within a layer mask. Download this FREE sample of 12 brushes straight from the pack to enjoy a selection of tools to quickly add bristly brush strokes to your designs.
Use the [ and ] keys to quickly alter the size, then make single clicks to place an instance of the brush with your chosen colour. Adjust the Angle setting in the Brush Settings panel to alter the orientation.
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