*** From the Archives ***

This article is from June 18, 2002, and is no longer current.

Photoshop 7: Understanding the Brushes Palette

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Controlling the Dynamic Options
Before discussing the additional Brushes palette options, an explanation of the Control pop-up menus is appropriate. Many of the options explained in the following sections are “dynamic” options – they produce variations in the brush as the brush is used. The variety of brush instances adds randomness to the stroke that would be time-consuming to create manually. You can use the Fade option to taper-off the effect on the brush. Photoshop 7 enables you to exercise even more control over the “randomness” of the variations when you use a drawing tablet.

Off: When Control is set to Off, Photoshop applies the selected jitter randomly and throughout the length of the brush stroke. The stroke is unregulated.

Fade: Fade is available with or without a pressure-sensitive tablet. When Fade is selected, the field immediately to the right of the Control menu is active. You specify a value between 1 and 9999. If you set a jitter slider to 0% and specify a value, the Fade command specifies either the value to which the stroke fades or when the specific jitter ends along the stroke.

All three examples use the same brush and Fade set to 25. Only one jitter option is active for each sample. The only difference among the three strokes shown is the one jitter setting. The brush uses the same tip and a Spacing of 100% to best illustrate the differences among the effects of the Fade setting.

  • The top sample shows Size Jitter set to 25%, with a minimum diameter of 50%. Note that the fade option forces the brush tip size to the 50% diameter after 25 instances of the brush.
  • The middle sample shows a stroke with the Angle Jitter set to 0% and Control set to Fade, 25. The brush tip “angles” 360 degrees over the first 25 instances. After completing the selected jitter, the stroke returns to its original appearance for the 26th instance and beyond.
  • The bottom stroke has Roundness Jitter set to 0%, Fade at 25 as the Control, and a Minimum Roundness setting of 20%. Like the top example, the stroke reaches the desired Roundness (20%) after 25 instances.For the first and third examples, the Fade field’s value represents the number of instances the stroke uses to reach the value specified for the jitter. In the middle example, the stroke uses the number entered in the Fade field as the extent or duration of the jitter.Pen Pressure: The Pen Pressure option is used with a pressure-sensitive tablet, such as those from Wacom. Increasing the pressure of the stylus on the tablet decreases the amount of jitter – the greater the push of the pen, the less the variation of the stroke. This image shows examples of Size, Angle, and Roundness Jitter with Pen Pressure activated. (In all three examples, the pen pressure is light on the ends and heavy in the middle.)

    Pen Tilt: Pen Tilt reads the angle of the stylus on the tablet rather than the pressure to adjust the jitter. It is especially useful for airbrush artists using the Brush tool with the Airbrush option.

    Stylus Wheel: Some tablet accessories, such as Wacom’s Intuous and Intuous2 Airbrushes, include a fingerwheel. When available, the wheel can be used to regulate the amount of variation with Stylus Wheel selected in the Control pop-up menu.

    Initial Direction: Available for the Angle Jitter option only, the Initial Direction option determines the orientation of the brush instances as you drag. In the next image, the settings are identical for both samples. The Angle Jitter is set to 25%, constraining the brush angles to -90 degrees to +90 degrees. The top sample, created from left to right, varies the angle in relation to the top of the page. The lower sample, dragged from right to left, reverses the orientation.

    The 25% setting for Angle Jitter restricts the brush tip angle to one-quarter of a circle (90 degrees) in either direction from the original brush orientation.

    Direction: Also available for the Angle Jitter option only, The Direction control orients the brush tip to the path rather than to the page. In these examples, the Angle Jitter is set to 0% to best show the orientation of the brush to the paths.

    The initial direction of drag when using Direction determines which way the brush tip instances will be pointed. The two examples in to the right illustrate the difference.

    Tip: Using Angle Jitter 0% and Control: Direction keeps the brush tip oriented to the path. This is a great way to use custom brushes to draw dashed lines, borders, dividing lines, even such things as railroad tracks and roads

    We’ll have more on Photoshop 7’s new brush controls in the coming weeks. Stay tuned.

    This story brought to you by the National Association of Photoshop Professionals (NAPP). Copyright 2002 KW Media Group. Photoshop is a registered trademark of Adobe Systems, Inc.

     


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  • Bohdan says:

    For those of us that have been working with PhotoShop for a while, this is nothing new just a rehash of the basics. The new brush styles are an added improvement, but creating them has not changed.
    Bo

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