THANK YOU! I always dreaded painting in Clip Studio due to how used to the Photoshop round brush I had become and trying to use clip studios brushes felt completely alien to me. You are a life saver!
This video is absolutely LIFE CHANGING!!!! Thank you so, SO much for this!! The hard and soft brushes you showed how to make here are awesome!! I've been struggling with this for so long and now I've finally been able to paint and blend in CSP the way I've always wanted to! I can't thank you enough, but I have to say one more time - Thank you!!
@@gabriel_swift8847 I keep my pressure sensitivity on. For me these brushes have been very responsive to different amounts of pressure with each stroke, letting me build up and blend color over a few strokes instead of all the color just plopping down at once with no transparency, which is what I personally prefer.
Thanks for the tip! I was trying to make this kind of brush on my own and wouldn't have known to deselect "Adjust brush density by gap," but it makes a big difference.
thank you for sharing this. I dont like the default brushes we get with CSP. Transferring my skills from Photoshop has been difficult. Hopefully this will make like easier.
Very helpful, thank you! I hadn't thought of modifying the Airbrushes, I was just trying to make it out of the Watercolor brushes. I wasn't getting the desired effects ;v;
The oil paint brush is a bit different. The shape is different and how it handles paint is a bit different too. For me the oil paint brush sometimes feel too strong, too much paint and not that soft when I work with it. But that is just how I feel.
The Mix ground color options are equivalent to Photoshop's mixer brush and if all options are fully understood, will behave as real world brushes used for natural media painting.. I need to find an in-depth explanation of these options..
Is there such a brush now in PS? That sounds great! I have not yet painted with the new versions. You might find a manual on the website of Clip Studio Paint that might explain how these settings work. What personally I like to do is is to test the settings one by one for the brush I like to use.
yeah photoshop's mixer brush not only blends with the ground colors but also has an ink well to simulate amount of paint on the brush before it runs dry or empty and even simulate dirty brushes by carrying over the last color it touched onto where ever your new stroke begins.. I guess maybe I'm looking for more brush settings as it applies to application.. Like when to use blend as opposed to running color? When is mixing rate of sub color a wise choice (almost like a dirty brush) I still don't get color stretch.. So it becomes style through discovery/testing as opposed to function (understanding the brush language and applying it to create style)..
Color stretch is interesting. If you set it high it will get the colors on your canvas and mix it with the paint on your brush more than if you set it to low. So if it is set to low your painting color will look cleaner and stronger, while if set to high the paints already existing on the canvas will "fade" the new paint. So they mix together but how they mix is something you will see when you use it. I have noticed that the effect is different depending on what kind of brush you use. For example an oil brush with this setting will slightly be different than an airbrush.
xD i just started digital, CSP's brush is way complicated. I find photoshop's brush more basic and easy to learn especially when rendering. The only reason why i use CSP is because it doesn't lag as much as PS and krita. I don't really care about the materials xD. Thnx This helps alot
I don't feel like watching a 14 minute video to make a regular round brush in Clip Studio. Couldn't they include some NORMAL brushes without any fancy blending effects?? was that too much to ask?? I think I'm going back to Photoshop
+Kevin Phillips Do you mean why would someone change the brushes to feel more like PS brushes? Maybe someone who is used to PS would like to work with similar tools he/she already knows how to use comfortable. Clip Studio brushes work differently, some are more traditional brushes which might be more challenging to learn to use.
THANK YOU! I always dreaded painting in Clip Studio due to how used to the Photoshop round brush I had become and trying to use clip studios brushes felt completely alien to me. You are a life saver!
I am glad I was able to help you with this. Yes, we can get used to the tools we use and then search for the same thing in other places.
This video is absolutely LIFE CHANGING!!!! Thank you so, SO much for this!! The hard and soft brushes you showed how to make here are awesome!! I've been struggling with this for so long and now I've finally been able to paint and blend in CSP the way I've always wanted to! I can't thank you enough, but I have to say one more time - Thank you!!
@@gabriel_swift8847 I keep my pressure sensitivity on. For me these brushes have been very responsive to different amounts of pressure with each stroke, letting me build up and blend color over a few strokes instead of all the color just plopping down at once with no transparency, which is what I personally prefer.
I think you did it! The one little thing I was missing that made the spray brush unusable compared to Photoshop's. Thanks so much!
I've been trying to force myself to use the default brush but I can't get used to them, these brushes are so nice to use, thank you so much!
Thanks for the tip! I was trying to make this kind of brush on my own and wouldn't have known to deselect "Adjust brush density by gap," but it makes a big difference.
Thank you very much! I've just created a very good brush for sketching and painting following your tutorial! 🙌😊
You are welcome! I am glad you made the brushes. 😊
Great tutorial and what a lovely accent!
thank you for sharing this. I dont like the default brushes we get with CSP. Transferring my skills from Photoshop has been difficult. Hopefully this will make like easier.
I hope it works for you.
Very helpful, thank you! I hadn't thought of modifying the Airbrushes, I was just trying to make it out of the Watercolor brushes. I wasn't getting the desired effects ;v;
THIS IS JUST GREAT, even better than a photoshop brush to be honnest thank you and please make more videos like these
I am glad the brushes work for you. 😁
Thank you so much! This is so much better for my style of shading.
Thank you so much! I could not find a good and fitting brush for myself in Clip Studio, but this tutorial helped a lot! :)
Thank you so much!! . you are a real life saver !
Thank you very much, I just transitioned to clip studio from ps and this is a life saver
Thank you so much!
Thanks you that's very useful for me
Thank you so much for this video! I was looking for this.
I am glad if it was helpful to you. And thank you for subscribing to the channel!! :D
Thank you for the video! May I ask, if you turn on the 'Mix ground color' option, how does the brush differ from CSP's default Oil Paint brush?
The oil paint brush is a bit different. The shape is different and how it handles paint is a bit different too. For me the oil paint brush sometimes feel too strong, too much paint and not that soft when I work with it. But that is just how I feel.
Hi, thanks for the tutorial, do you know if it there a brush property similar to photoshop scatter ? thanks
Thank you !
This was so helpful, omg thank you
Thank you too for watching the video!
You are welcome!
The Mix ground color options are equivalent to Photoshop's mixer brush and if all options are fully understood, will behave as real world brushes used for natural media painting.. I need to find an in-depth explanation of these options..
Is there such a brush now in PS? That sounds great! I have not yet painted with the new versions.
You might find a manual on the website of Clip Studio Paint that might explain how these settings work. What personally I like to do is is to test the settings one by one for the brush I like to use.
yeah photoshop's mixer brush not only blends with the ground colors but also has an ink well to simulate amount of paint on the brush before it runs dry or empty and even simulate dirty brushes by carrying over the last color it touched onto where ever your new stroke begins..
I guess maybe I'm looking for more brush settings as it applies to application.. Like when to use blend as opposed to running color? When is mixing rate of sub color a wise choice (almost like a dirty brush) I still don't get color stretch.. So it becomes style through discovery/testing as opposed to function (understanding the brush language and applying it to create style)..
Color stretch is interesting. If you set it high it will get the colors on your canvas and mix it with the paint on your brush more than if you set it to low. So if it is set to low your painting color will look cleaner and stronger, while if set to high the paints already existing on the canvas will "fade" the new paint. So they mix together but how they mix is something you will see when you use it. I have noticed that the effect is different depending on what kind of brush you use. For example an oil brush with this setting will slightly be different than an airbrush.
Very Helpful :)
xD i just started digital, CSP's brush is way complicated. I find photoshop's brush more basic and easy to learn especially when rendering. The only reason why i use CSP is because it doesn't lag as much as PS and krita. I don't really care about the materials xD. Thnx This helps alot
tysm
Hello o3o it's like almost 4 years late but your voice is amazing OwO
Thank you! 😁
somehow my color mixing function is blocked, why is that?
thanks girl
You are welcome!
Thank you so much! :)
Thank You for watching the video!
I accidentally deleted my whole airbrush brushes, can i bring it back?😅
In case you haven't already fixed it: next to the symbol for the changing the brush settings is a symbol for reseting the tool
feels illegal to see white csp
just use the smooth paint brush lol
I don't feel like watching a 14 minute video to make a regular round brush in Clip Studio. Couldn't they include some NORMAL brushes without any fancy blending effects?? was that too much to ask?? I think I'm going back to Photoshop
Why would you want to?
+Kevin Phillips Do you mean why would someone change the brushes to feel more like PS brushes? Maybe someone who is used to PS would like to work with similar tools he/she already knows how to use comfortable. Clip Studio brushes work differently, some are more traditional brushes which might be more challenging to learn to use.