It up to the users skills, there is no concrete answers, some people use the custom brush from Wacom interfaces, while others the standard ones from PS, and some even use the Square Brush.
Either way, you need a tablet for the pressure and other sensitivity related points, that is the only thing that will give you enough control to paint a hand painted look on your textures.
Either way, you need a tablet for the pressure and other sensitivity related points, that is the only thing that will give you enough control to paint a hand painted look on your textures.
Or you are JFletcher and handpaint like a boss with a mouse(i know he has a tablet now, but there are older works where he only used a mouse)
Or you are JFletcher and handpaint like a boss with a mouse(i know he has a tablet now, but there are older works where he only used a mouse)
If you go for the hard look, yes. I can't really recommend mice anymore since you waste too much time using the eraser or background colors to compensate for the precise hard look you need.
Not to mention, many people still can't get Lazy-Nezumi to run in their PS.
Hey guys, JO420 isn't asking how to hand paint textures he's asking about brushes. He's an old salt, I'm sure he could show you guys a thing or two about painting textures.
Here's an old thread linking some brushes if you fancy taking a looksee
im here 100% with Rhinokey
hard round and square.
sometimes soft round for larger colorgradiations, dont need to do everyone by hand.
but handpainted is an area were i would encourage everyone to get creative with looks shaders and brushes alike, so try out new styles.
also trying to recreate 2D styles often doesnt realy work so well, better try to make up something yourself, that works in 3D.
Thanks alot for the replies, alot of good ideas about what sort of brushes other artists use and ive included a few in my brush set
Justin: Wow thanks for helping me feel like an old man which i certainly am in 3d artist years, i happened to look at my sig and damn,member since 2004 But you hit the nail on te head,i was just looking for some perspectives on what other artists use to hand paint textures, i am training a few artist straight out of uni and i wanted to give them different perspectives to the style besides my own to help them improve and make so quality art work
I've been meaning to ask, this seems like an appropriate topic, do you guys have any tips as to how to customize the brush in photoshop to get a bit more texture?
Digital paintings always seem too clean to me compared to traditional, where you get texture from brush strokes and the canvas.
I've been meaning to ask, this seems like an appropriate topic, do you guys have any tips as to how to customize the brush in photoshop to get a bit more texture?
Digital paintings always seem too clean to me compared to traditional, where you get texture from brush strokes and the canvas.
There are brushes in photoshop, and custom brushes in which to do that.... they blend like paint but its not traditional feeling as say Corel Painter, both digital. Its all in the bushes.
I've been meaning to ask, this seems like an appropriate topic, do you guys have any tips as to how to customize the brush in photoshop to get a bit more texture?
Digital paintings always seem too clean to me compared to traditional, where you get texture from brush strokes and the canvas.
I found this to be an issue as well when I first started painting digitally. I use a lot of Photoshop's basic brushes, then open up the brush editor and go nuts till I find something that feels right. The things I mess with first are usually the angle jitter (set to direction) and scattering. Then sometimes dual brush. Set to mid opacity and rock out!
The day Wacom comes out with a fully fledged bristle brush instead of a pen for their tablets is the day I'm in heaven :P
Replies
Either way, you need a tablet for the pressure and other sensitivity related points, that is the only thing that will give you enough control to paint a hand painted look on your textures.
Or you are JFletcher and handpaint like a boss with a mouse(i know he has a tablet now, but there are older works where he only used a mouse)
You can get it at his deviant art page here: http://mr--jack.deviantart.com/gallery/?q=brushes#/d1yc98d
If you go for the hard look, yes. I can't really recommend mice anymore since you waste too much time using the eraser or background colors to compensate for the precise hard look you need.
Not to mention, many people still can't get Lazy-Nezumi to run in their PS.
Here's an old thread linking some brushes if you fancy taking a looksee
Texturing is just applied painting, its much easier/quicker for a painter to learn to texture than for a non-painter.
These brush looks very cool !
hard round and square.
sometimes soft round for larger colorgradiations, dont need to do everyone by hand.
but handpainted is an area were i would encourage everyone to get creative with looks shaders and brushes alike, so try out new styles.
also trying to recreate 2D styles often doesnt realy work so well, better try to make up something yourself, that works in 3D.
Justin: Wow thanks for helping me feel like an old man which i certainly am in 3d artist years, i happened to look at my sig and damn,member since 2004 But you hit the nail on te head,i was just looking for some perspectives on what other artists use to hand paint textures, i am training a few artist straight out of uni and i wanted to give them different perspectives to the style besides my own to help them improve and make so quality art work
[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1erX_ICi89A&list=UUyD0h3pqwxXRf7TSlvW2LPQ&index=8&feature=plpp_video"]Hand Painted Realist Stone Tile Tutor - YouTube[/ame]
I'm going to do a hand painted stream pretty soon as well, it's going to focus 3D Coat & Photoshop - I'll post an update when I have a date set.
Digital paintings always seem too clean to me compared to traditional, where you get texture from brush strokes and the canvas.
There are brushes in photoshop, and custom brushes in which to do that.... they blend like paint but its not traditional feeling as say Corel Painter, both digital. Its all in the bushes.
I found this to be an issue as well when I first started painting digitally. I use a lot of Photoshop's basic brushes, then open up the brush editor and go nuts till I find something that feels right. The things I mess with first are usually the angle jitter (set to direction) and scattering. Then sometimes dual brush. Set to mid opacity and rock out!
The day Wacom comes out with a fully fledged bristle brush instead of a pen for their tablets is the day I'm in heaven :P