![]() ![]() Or just download the brush and try it for yourself. Click the image to see a higher-rez version. Well the line quality doesn't really come through at this size. Here is a celebration of my new Fun Sketchin' Brush It creates a nice rough line that tapers nicely. It's fast and sometimes a bit unpredictable, particularly when turning corners. It's a high contrast grainy brush which I have become kind of addicted to. Here's a Frankenstein drawing I made in Photoshop with the St umpy Pencil.Ĭlick the image to get a higher rez version. I made it on CS2, but it might work in CS1, or even earlier. Import this tool from the Photoshop Tools palette. Get it here: (this tool has been updated and is now available from this post) I’m not going to talk about the cost differential between the two instruments. But after a lot of experimentation I think it’s close. And Photoshop doesn’t give the right options to do the variety of line. Of course it’s missing the tactile sensation of rubbing graphite against paper grain. It has a nice grain quality, it’s fast and fun to use. I have built a Photoshop brush that gets some of it right. Recreating the experience of a cheap number 2 pencil on the computer has been a bit of a Holy Grail for me. And when you sharpen the pencil with a blade, it lasts seemingly forever! Pencil sharpeners, particularly the mechanical kind, devour pencils. ![]() It’s like a seamless progression from brain to paper. light or dark with the slightest variation in pressure… and it’s so soft it hardly takes anything to get a mark on the page. It creates a beautiful line – fat or thin with a simple twist of the pencil. ![]() Beyond a doubt, my favorite drawing implement is a cheap number 2 pencil - hand shaved with a sharp blade so the pencil tip is stumpy and irregular. ![]()
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