- Customize and Create Your Own Brushes Photoshop allows you to edit existing brush presets or create new ones by using the Brushes palette. The flexibility that Photoshop’s brushes offer can help you achieve just the right look when retouching, working with masks, or illustrating.
- Press B to access the Brush tool and then choose Window --> Brushes to display the Brushes palette. Select a brush from the Brush Presets Picker.
- Save Custom Brush Settings as Presets Being able to save your brush settings can be a huge time-saver. When you develop one that works best for you, definitely save it, or else be faced with the daunting task of trying to remember detailed settings in order to re-create a brush.
- Using what you now know about the Brushes palette, choose the brush settings that you’d like to apply to your custom brush.
- Use Brushes Effectively with Layer Masks Painting in layer masks with the Brush tool is a great hands-on technique for combining image layers in a print montage. It can also be a useful technique for controlling adjustments made in Photoshop, including smart filters. Working with brushes and layer masks not only provides an incredible amount of editing control—it’s also completely nondestructive.
- Create a montage by using layer masks and brushes, or use them to control where adjustments are applied in a more hands-on fashion.
- Restore with History Painting The History Brush allows you to paint backward in time. It can be used to restore parts of an image that were accidentally damaged or erased. For example, specific areas of an image that have become too blurry as the result of applying a noise reduction filter to the entire photo can be restored by using the History brush.
- Work with confidence as you edit your images. It helps to know that if you get into a situation where you’d like to restore certain areas of an image to a previous history state, you can with the History brush.
- Press B to access the Brush tool and then choose Window --> Brushes to display the Brushes palette. Select a brush from the Brush Presets Picker.
- Save Custom Brush Settings as Presets Being able to save your brush settings can be a huge time-saver. When you develop one that works best for you, definitely save it, or else be faced with the daunting task of trying to remember detailed settings in order to re-create a brush.
- Using what you now know about the Brushes palette, choose the brush settings that you’d like to apply to your custom brush.
- Use Brushes Effectively with Layer Masks Painting in layer masks with the Brush tool is a great hands-on technique for combining image layers in a print montage. It can also be a useful technique for controlling adjustments made in Photoshop, including smart filters. Working with brushes and layer masks not only provides an incredible amount of editing control—it’s also completely nondestructive.
- Create a montage by using layer masks and brushes, or use them to control where adjustments are applied in a more hands-on fashion.
- Restore with History Painting The History Brush allows you to paint backward in time. It can be used to restore parts of an image that were accidentally damaged or erased. For example, specific areas of an image that have become too blurry as the result of applying a noise reduction filter to the entire photo can be restored by using the History brush.
- Work with confidence as you edit your images. It helps to know that if you get into a situation where you’d like to restore certain areas of an image to a previous history state, you can with the History brush.
8 Important Things when Working with Brush
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