![]() Set Glow to a darker color to get a full range from dark to light on your stroke. The Color Picker can be pinned to the interface and there is a Glow checkbox that can be added to your strokes. ![]() ![]() Somewhat like PS Brush Panel’s Color Dynamics Brightness Jitter slider. When set to the max 50%, 50% of the Color Picker Triangle values are added into the stroke. The Fur Brush also offers a Value Variability – set to 0 and the brush paints with 100% selected color. All the brushes offer Size and Opacity and the option to turn on pressure sensitivity for both. The brushes do have a bit of a Painter brush feel to them, as there are several extra variations for the some of the brushes that PS does not offer. This image used three brushes – the Cluster Brush, the Fur Brush and the Flame Brush. It consists of 10 different brushes that represent some of the various brush sets you can buy at Corel. The Exclusive Pack of brushes are loaded when the basic plug-in software is purchased. The plug-in is now accessed from the Filter menu in Photoshop so it is really easy to open up once the program has been loaded. Below is the original image after coming out of Lightroom where just the basic sliders were adjusted. The tree image above was taken in Florida and there was absolutely nothing that great about it. Thought I would show the before and after applying the filter to the images to give a feel for what these brushes can do. Lots of ParticleShop info is on YouTube about how to use this plug-in, so this blog is just a quick introduction. This week I am going to do a quick post on the Corel ParticleShop plug-in for Photoshop. INTRO TO COREL PARTICLESHOP BRUSHES FOR PHOTOSHOP
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |