These tutorials have reignited my old love for Photoshop - before it was mainly commercial work. Not that I don't love the work I do for my clients, but this takes me back to art school and doing art for art's sake. Thanks!
Right on... ya, I had a second wave of interest in Photoshop starting a few years ago... Seeing it through new eyes after working primarily in AE and Maya for a living. Pretty fun stuff once you start to dig into it!
Excellent tutorial, Brady. After watching this, I started binge watching many other of your tutorials. After visiting your website and seeing the content you were offering, I decided to support the site. I have purchased small texture packs in the past, but am blown away at the content you provide and the instruction that you give here on TH-cam. It was a very easy decision to support what you are doing. Keep it up.
the oil paint art history brushes and also the sketch art history brushes are amazing. Plus the highly competent videos, thank you for your wonderful work from which I and so many interested parties benefit. Thank you very much for that!
Being working with photoshop for ... well since it exists and following a ton a of photoshop artist and tutorial sites, this is the channel that i love the most. Few less videos, but you tackle things that experience users don´t really know or know just a little bit.
Great job. You can use blendif with the underlying image to bring in just a touch of the original, which will help fill in some of the detail. I really like this.
Good call! I also found using the original on top set to Pin Light (a blending mode I almost never use!) does a nice job of just filling in the sharp blacks and whites
While brush is way too simplistic, the technique itself is absolutely stellar. For the longest time I avoided AHB, because of my laziness to learn what it is, but your videos, as always, inspire to try something new and experiment with it for yourself. Big upvotes for your dedication.
Right on, ya you can get pretty crazy with the brushes. I tend to come back to the simpler brush shapes since the tool itself brings so much to the table
@@Texturelabs I work for a company that has 9 concert venues in SoCal... and I do all of the graphics.... this is one bloody easy technique that I can use to make completely unique poster for a band. Thanks again for your slick knowledge 👍
Amazing tutorial as always! Can you kindly do one dedicated to the 80s illustrated airbrush movie poster style but regarding the portrait style for photoshop? Much appreciate it!
Hey Brady, thank-you for a lovely tutorial. It was quick; not, one of your better ones. It wasn't really building on the art history tutorial. Thank-you for the brushes though. A great intro to the Art History brush though.
really loved your video. I have been following you for couple of months, it really helps me widen my horizon. would love to see such quality brush presets in futur :P thank you so much texture labs
I followed the instruction and triple checked but after i created the white layer I keep getting this message "could not rasterize because the pixel data for this layer is not directly editable". When I click on layer and go to rasterize layer, it is greyed out. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Splendid Tutorial and Efficient to use. However, as amateur who's still not so familiar with photoshop. May I know how you make the pastel or oil paint effects? How do you configure the settings for the brushes? Thanks.
Wow thanks for this resource! Is it too much to ask how did you made those presets and what's the logic behind it? I love your tutorials exactly because of this, you know to explain every little detail so I'm not just copying some technique on you tube but learning about the Photoshop as well.
Great tutorial Brady thanks as always! Now if only Photoshop could make a realistic/reliable outline AI tool with clean inking tool for just ink line work...like manga/comics have etc....that would be a massive time saver! I've tried many so called "ink sketch plugins" they all fail it's just taking a harsh threshold filter and creating ink outlines around the edges. One day!
Seriously. I gave it a really solid try by trying to hijack the Liquify tools - they do a great job of recognizing eyes, noses, chin lines, etc. No dice yet, but I still feel like there might be something there...
I can't seem to replicate this effect, I followed all the steps but when I use the art history brush on a new white layer, it just creates random painted lines that don't replicate the snapshot I made of the source image? Any tips?
Hey, thanks for your tutorials, they're really helpful! Would you mind sharing your tricks on something simpler? I would like to see a video about how you can manipulate text on "difficult" backgrounds to make it more readable. Like red text on a tungsten light photo eg
What am I doing wrong? I tried the color example at the end of the video and was getting the message "Could not rasterize because the pixel data for this layer is not directly editable." Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Is there a way to reduce the "area of effect" of the brush without reducing the size of the "strokes"? I'm unfamiliar with brushes in Photoshop but I didn't see anything in the brush settings that seemed relevant. Really cool tutorial, though! This is my first time hearing of the Art History Brush and it's inspiring.
Hmmm.....for some reason I keep getting this message from PS each time I try to draw on the new layer: "Could not rasterize because the pixel data for this layer is not directly editable." Thoughts?
Cool thanks! What I did was record using the brush in an action (with Allow Tool Recording enabled). Then played it back and just screen captured! I ran the action a few times, which gets slightly different results every time. Then stacked them in After Effects and cycled through the layer visibility, so they'd kind of jump around and look like new sketches on each frame. Haha, long answer!
Hi, I want to run this effect on a video in Photoshop, but when the timeline is on, the history brush doesn't work on the new layer. If you can help me, please Hi, I want to run this effect on a video in Photoshop, but when the timeline is on, the history brush doesn't work on the new layer. If you can help me, please 😃🤞❤
Photoshop, along with its compatible plugins and many processes are a marvel. However, the tutorial (above) doesn't really live up to its claim of producing realistic pencil sketches. The process described may give some people the sense of being a fine artist; but the result so often with digital tools employed to create "fine art looks" is mechanical and artificial.
thank you for the great tutorial,sir. have you checked your mailbox? I want to share your tutorials to another website.I explained everything in the e-mail. looking forward to your reply.
These tutorials have reignited my old love for Photoshop - before it was mainly commercial work. Not that I don't love the work I do for my clients, but this takes me back to art school and doing art for art's sake. Thanks!
Right on... ya, I had a second wave of interest in Photoshop starting a few years ago... Seeing it through new eyes after working primarily in AE and Maya for a living. Pretty fun stuff once you start to dig into it!
Excellent tutorial, Brady. After watching this, I started binge watching many other of your tutorials. After visiting your website and seeing the content you were offering, I decided to support the site. I have purchased small texture packs in the past, but am blown away at the content you provide and the instruction that you give here on TH-cam. It was a very easy decision to support what you are doing. Keep it up.
the oil paint art history brushes and also the sketch art history brushes are amazing. Plus the highly competent videos, thank you for your wonderful work from which I and so many interested parties benefit. Thank you very much for that!
Being working with photoshop for ... well since it exists and following a ton a of photoshop artist and tutorial sites, this is the channel that i love the most. Few less videos, but you tackle things that experience users don´t really know or know just a little bit.
Absolutely genius. What a great and quick way to achieve the look. Definitely effective.
Awesome thanks Larry!
Great job. You can use blendif with the underlying image to bring in just a touch of the original, which will help fill in some of the detail. I really like this.
Good call! I also found using the original on top set to Pin Light (a blending mode I almost never use!) does a nice job of just filling in the sharp blacks and whites
You are awesome! Best patreon out there!
Awesome, thank you Carlton!
Great tutorial as always - proud to be a Patreon member!
Right on, happy to have you on board!
Hey, surprising, what brushes and what a process. You helped me draw back a veil that hid a whole field of exploration. Thank you
The smile on my face when I saw this pop up!
Nice, thanks!
Your tutorials are just amazing, they always make me want to try new thing in photoshop, can you please make a video of how you approch these effects?
Thanks very much! Definitely thinking about doing something like that - I'm still narrowing in on what shape it would take... Will keep at it!
While brush is way too simplistic, the technique itself is absolutely stellar. For the longest time I avoided AHB, because of my laziness to learn what it is, but your videos, as always, inspire to try something new and experiment with it for yourself. Big upvotes for your dedication.
Right on, ya you can get pretty crazy with the brushes. I tend to come back to the simpler brush shapes since the tool itself brings so much to the table
Ahh man... incredible.... insanely useful! Oh the Ideas that just flooded my head... :)
Nice, tons of room to experiment... glad to hear it!
@@Texturelabs I work for a company that has 9 concert venues in SoCal... and I do all of the graphics.... this is one bloody easy technique that I can use to make completely unique poster for a band. Thanks again for your slick knowledge 👍
Never seen something like this!! Thanks!!
THIS IS THE BEST CHANNEL!
Was waiting for another texturelabs video 🤩 Love your videos and thank you so much for the amazing content
Right on, thank you!
Amazing as always. Bravo.
Terrific stuff - I really enjoy your creative imagination! Thanks for the brush preset too!👏🏻👏🏻
Amazing as always!
Appreciate that!
YOU ARE A GENIUS 👏👏👏
Man, you’re a genius. Thank you for so many useful tutorials.
Thanks, good to see ya!
Amazing tutorial as always! Can you kindly do one dedicated to the 80s illustrated airbrush movie poster style but regarding the portrait style for photoshop? Much appreciate it!
simply perfect
KING
My man!
Thank you very much for your tutorials. You are my Andrew Kramer 2.0 ;) Keep up the great work
Haha thanks man, Kramer set a crazy high bar!
Love this, Brady.
Hey Brady, thank-you for a lovely tutorial. It was quick; not, one of your better ones. It wasn't really building on the art history tutorial. Thank-you for the brushes though. A great intro to the Art History brush though.
faking sketches in ps is usually such a dead end, but this looks fantastic
Right on, appreciate that. It still keeps me up at night trying to figure out a bulletproof way to trace the contours of things!
really loved your video. I have been following you for couple of months, it really helps me widen my horizon. would love to see such quality brush presets in futur :P thank you so much texture labs
thankss texturelabs
Very Nice. Thank you for this tutorial. Can't wait to try it out.
Excellent.. as always 👍
Right on, thank you my friend!
Superb!
Love this chanel !
Cheers thanks!
I followed the instruction and triple checked but after i created the white layer I keep getting this message "could not rasterize because the pixel data for this layer is not directly editable". When I click on layer and go to rasterize layer, it is greyed out. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Wow, this is cool.
Thanks Dave!
Arigatou sensei... Number One best!!!!
Thanks! Your the man!
Thank you!)
When I found you you were 5k subs, and that was a few months ago... great channel bud!
thank you!
Splendid Tutorial and Efficient to use. However, as amateur who's still not so familiar with photoshop. May I know how you make the pastel or oil paint effects? How do you configure the settings for the brushes? Thanks.
Every time you manage to impress me to the state where my jaw hit the ground
You are mind amazing... mind blowing idea.
Please do a tutorial for easy scribble art similar to this
Wow thanks for this resource! Is it too much to ask how did you made those presets and what's the logic behind it? I love your tutorials exactly because of this, you know to explain every little detail so I'm not just copying some technique on you tube but learning about the Photoshop as well.
As always great and unexpected content.
Really enjoyed the video. I tried downloading the brush to try it but the link is broken for me
Cool thanks! Just checked the link and it appears to be active here... Was it the link to the site, or the actual download button not working?
@@Texturelabs I got it, I changed browsers. I tried out the effect and is going to work perfect for my college graphic design project!
I wouldn’t be surprised if engineers at Adobe were watching these tutorials saying to each other: “well, we had no idea this can be done”!!!
This comment made my day 😆😆😆😆😆
Great tutorial Brady thanks as always! Now if only Photoshop could make a realistic/reliable outline AI tool with clean inking tool for just ink line work...like manga/comics have etc....that would be a massive time saver! I've tried many so called "ink sketch plugins" they all fail it's just taking a harsh threshold filter and creating ink outlines around the edges. One day!
Seriously. I gave it a really solid try by trying to hijack the Liquify tools - they do a great job of recognizing eyes, noses, chin lines, etc. No dice yet, but I still feel like there might be something there...
very nice! great sharing thanks alot
Thank you
You have a new subscribe on your channel, amazing content!
Is thwre a way to make one-line-path art on illustrator on a given image?
I can't seem to replicate this effect, I followed all the steps but when I use the art history brush on a new white layer, it just creates random painted lines that don't replicate the snapshot I made of the source image? Any tips?
Hi, can't find a link to the free brush you refer to.
Thank you.
Hey, thanks for your tutorials, they're really helpful! Would you mind sharing your tricks on something simpler? I would like to see a video about how you can manipulate text on "difficult" backgrounds to make it more readable. Like red text on a tungsten light photo eg
Great Contents
Could not rasterize because the pixel data for this layer is not directly editable.
Getting this on all layers. Any ideas?
What am I doing wrong? I tried the color example at the end of the video and was getting the message "Could not rasterize because the pixel data for this layer is not directly editable." Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Never mind. I got it. It's a 16-bit/8-bit thing.
THANK YOU!
Awesome man .. but plz do the text in the series called landscapers
I love those graphics too! Fairly easy-ish using projection in a good 3d app. Seems like there's a way to do it in AE... gonna try to recall!
Thanks man ❤️
Is there a way to reduce the "area of effect" of the brush without reducing the size of the "strokes"? I'm unfamiliar with brushes in Photoshop but I didn't see anything in the brush settings that seemed relevant.
Really cool tutorial, though! This is my first time hearing of the Art History Brush and it's inspiring.
Esse vídeo foi bom d+ pra mim, obrigado
Hmmm.....for some reason I keep getting this message from PS each time I try to draw on the new layer: "Could not rasterize because the pixel data for this layer is not directly editable." Thoughts?
Seems to be some complication in bringing the image over from Lightroom. Bringing it directly in from a saved copy solves the issue...
Thanks, Steven. Your hint got me around the "could not rasterize" problem.
the intro is very cool i guess you made it by creating pngs in PS
Cool thanks! What I did was record using the brush in an action (with Allow Tool Recording enabled). Then played it back and just screen captured! I ran the action a few times, which gets slightly different results every time. Then stacked them in After Effects and cycled through the layer visibility, so they'd kind of jump around and look like new sketches on each frame. Haha, long answer!
@@Texturelabs wow that's really helpful. i like doing lyric videos and with that technique i can make a really cool one. thanks for the help ♥
The bob ross of digital art
I followed step by step but the brush just does splats around. What could be the problem? How can I actually get the effect?
Hi, I want to run this effect on a video in Photoshop, but when the timeline is on, the history brush doesn't work on the new layer. If you can help me, please
Hi, I want to run this effect on a video in Photoshop, but when the timeline is on, the history brush doesn't work on the new layer. If you can help me, please 😃🤞❤
Plz some more ae tuts plzzzzz.
Can you make a tutorial on how to make anime GFX?
Oh my god... I mean you are my god.
where have i heard that beat before? Luke Vibert/Wagon Christ?
you're telling me i'm Picasso now?
I N S A N E
Photoshop, along with its compatible plugins and many processes are a marvel. However, the tutorial (above) doesn't really live up to its claim of producing realistic pencil sketches. The process described may give some people the sense of being a fine artist; but the result so often with digital tools employed to create "fine art looks" is mechanical and artificial.
thank you for the great tutorial,sir. have you checked your mailbox? I want to share your tutorials to another website.I explained everything in the e-mail. looking forward to your reply.
Cool effect but I would feel deceitful.