The digital brush is as effective as the physical one. When painted by an expert hand, Photoshop brushes can speak many words. It helps to connect with your audience which words can’t convey. Mastering it, however, is not an easy task by any means. In fact the going gets tough here. It takes superior precision and years of practice to create a connection between the monitor and your hand.
This article is aimed to provide Photoshop beginners with the basics of Photoshop Brushes, which is arguably the most important function of Photoshop.
Find the Brush Tool in Photoshop Toolbox
You can locate the Brush Tool in the Toolbox as shown below:
Brush Preset Picker
The Brush Preset Picker menu can be accessed by clicking the drop down menu next to the brush preview.
It presents three options to control the brush, namely: “Size,” “Hardness” and “Brush Shape.” The size takes care of the width and height of the brush in terms of pixel. Hardness deals with round brushes and brush shape presents with various brush options.
Brush Mode
The brush mode decides how painted pixels affect the current layer. These modes working mechanism is similar to the Blend Mode on the layer’s palette. The differentiating factor is that they’re converted to absolute values when the stroke is over.
Opacity, Flow and Airbrush
These three features work in tandem to decipher the quantity of paint thrown on the canvas. Opacity acts as the master control; it decides the amount of paint that can be used with each stroke. Flow decides the amount of paint that can be applied to an area with every brush movement. The Airbrush setting helps one to build up paint based on time rather than movement.
Brush Presets
This menu keeps track of all the available Photoshop brushes. Some of the presets only change the brush shape; others have advanced settings which could be utilized. A number of brush libraries are also available other than the defaults. This can be easily added to the current list. The provision of creating a new brush is also available in Photoshop.
This brush preset window can be found under Window > Brush Preset:
Dynamic Brush Options
You can press the “F5” key on your keyboard to bring the Dynamic Brush Options window. From there you can set the shape, scattering and a few others:
Experiment with these settings and see what results they bring to your brush.
Pen Pressure
This is an extremely handy tool. This can only come into play when you use a tablet device (such as a Wacom Intuos). Pen pressure keeps track of the values based on the pressure with which the pen is pressed against the tablet. It results in very mature looking paints especially when it is used in collaboration with opacity settings and size.
Almost all versions of Photoshop come with Pen Pressure built-in so you can take full advantage of a tablet device.
That’s for this tutorial! Hope you learn a few things about Photoshop Brushes! Remember practice always makes it better!
3 Comments
i see no pictures -_-
This is a very thorough tutorial on brushes. Bookmarked!
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