lexxercise:

I’ve been getting a lot of asks lately about the brushes and textures I use in my work, so here’s a BIG FAT REFERENCE POST for those of you who were curious! Bear in mind that I’m really lazy and don’t know what half the settings do, so don’t be afraid to experiment to figure out what works best for you :>

BRUSHES

Pencil

I use the pencil tool with SAI’s native paper texture both for sketching and for applying opaque color with no blending. Lower opacities give it the feel of different pencil hardnesses, while full opacity makes it more like a palette knife, laying down hard-edged, heavy color for detail work or eventual blending with other brushes.

Ink Pen

Mostly made this because I’m lazy and I didn’t want to have to keep turning my textures off/opacity up when I wanted to ink something (even though I don’t do it very often), or lay down flat colors. I find the line quality to be much more crisp than Photoshop, and you can manually adjust in-program stabilization to help smooth out hand wobbles.

Round Brush

The plain ol’ brush tool acts as sort of an in-between for me in terms of brush flow. It’s heavier than my usual workhorse brush, for faster color application and rough blending, but not as heavy as the pencil tool, which has no blending at all. I like to use the canvas texture on this brush to help break up the unnatural smoothness that usually accompanies digital brushes, but it works just fine without.

Flat Brush

A brush tool set to flat bristle is by far my favorite to paint with. I don’t use any textures with it because I think the shape of the brush provides enough of that by itself. I use it for everything from rough washes to more refined shaping and polish. It’s just GREAT.

Watercolor

Best used for smooth blending, washes, gradients, and smoky atmospheric effects.

Cloud

Basically a grittier version of the watercolor tool, because too much smoothness weird me out. Good for clouds and fog, as the name suggests, or just less boring gradient fills.

TEXTURE OVERLAY

To further stave off the artificially smooth look of digital painting, I almost always overlay some sort of paper texture, and it’s almost always this one, which I scanned and edited myself. You’re all welcome to use it, no permission required!

Using overlays in SAI is just as easy as using them in Photoshop. Just paste the texture into its own layer above everything you want it to apply to, and change the layer mode to Overlay. That’s it!

Want a more prominent texture? Up the contrast. Something more subtle? Lower the contrast or reduce the layer opacity. You can also use a tinted overlay to adjust the overall palette and bring a little more color unity to an otherwise disparate piece! Just be aware that too much texture can hurt the readability of the work beneath it, so I’d err on the side of subtlety.

Hope that helps!

-L

Posted May 14, 2014 at 12:59pm
Via lexxercise
Showing 122,477 notes
  1. retro-gaymer reblogged this from hextalker
  2. arttyyymc reblogged this from arttyyymc
  3. jiasthings reblogged this from jiasthings
  4. and-of-course reblogged this from sullytutorial
  5. rezfrosting reblogged this from woohahey
  6. woohahey reblogged this from bigsis-cephy
  7. bigsis-cephy reblogged this from lexxercise
  8. jerememe-lemon reblogged this from crabschip
  9. devilbat17 reblogged this from ngemutual
  10. crabschip reblogged this from ngemutual
  11. ngemutual reblogged this from spectrealenko
  12. notfuckingstrain reblogged this from hoodyshunger
  13. jjuspo reblogged this from hoodyshunger
  14. tuvor-kun reblogged this from ophio
  15. chookitypok reblogged this from hoodyshunger
  16. kakira reblogged this from hoodyshunger
  17. hoodyshunger reblogged this from hextalker
  18. ineffablybisexual reblogged this from crypt1c-angels
  19. auri-a-ghost reblogged this from ophio
  20. ophio reblogged this from crypt1c-angels
  21. growliere reblogged this from ryliceracc
  22. ryliceracc reblogged this from kitsunaii