double watercolor brush
introduction
Hello, I hope you are having a good day, this time I come to show you my new watercolor brushes that I create using the double-ended function that clip studio recently incorporated
For more information on how to create your own double brush from scratch, I strongly recommend that you see the following post in detail, they teach you everything you need to know about how the double brush works.
Brushes
I made 10 brushes you can see them in the image below, the RED DOT shows how normal brushes were and the BLUE DOT shows how the brush looks like with [double tip]
BRUSH 1:
this is the basic brush setting.
the first point, the [direction] of the second point (the direction is basically the way the two points interact I would say it is more like the blending mode) in this case the direction is [multiply] and finally the shape of the second brush.
brush settings 2, 3, 4 and 5
BRUSH 2:
I feel that this brush simulates having a brush loaded with water with little ink when passing several times through the same stroke without lifting the pencil, the color simply goes away.
In the image you can see the configuration of the first tip [brush tip], you can notice that in [angle] of the brush I have activated the option of [random] with 100% force, this makes the tip when drawing simply change your angle randomly that will give a good effect.
You can also see that in [brush density] I have [pen pressure] turned on and also [speed].
[stroke]
in [interval] I have the option of the 3 points
now in the image you will see the configuration of the second tip.
[D- brush shape]
we activate the [double brush] in [direction] I have marked [linear height]
the [brush size] of the second tip is at 19.50 and the first tip is 7.40 I mention this so that you have to count the size by making it larger or smaller everything will change.
[D- brush tip]
[D- brush density] I have activated the option of the stylus [pen pressure] and [speed]
Also, as you can see, I have activated the option of [D- adjust the brush density by space]
and finally I have a texture in [D- texture]
[D- density of paper texture] 50
[D- invert texture] activated
[D- percentage of scale] 67
For brushes 3, 4 and 5 we are going to use brush 2 as a base, both the shape of the tip of the brushes and the configuration, the same as I showed you above, but with slight adjustments
BRUSH 3.
for this brush as I said we keep everything, but we make a slight change in
[D- brush shape]
[D- brush size] 9.51
BRUSH 4
[brush size]
[brush size] 4.70
we activate the option [random]
[minimum value] 22
[Spray effect]
we activate the option [spray effect]
[Particle size] 1.81
we activate the option [brush size]
[particle density] and [spray deviation] keep the image
[particle direction] 0
[D- brush shape]
[D- brush size] 12.26
[apply to main brush size] option enabled
[D- spray effect]
we activate the option [spray effect]
[Particle size] 15.47
[D- brush size] disabled
[particle density] and [spray deviation] keep the image
[particle direction] 197.6
BRUSH 5.
for this brush we simply deactivate [spray effect] and [D- spray effect]
[ink]
[opacity]
we activate [pencil pressure]
we activate [speed], [minimum value] 42
we activate [random]
As you can see you can create different brushes with the same tips, it is a matter of changing the configuration of these a little, being very honest each of the brushes came out in a genuine way I have no idea what I was doing at that time and now neither, it's all experimentation and moving things randomly.
illustration using the double watercolor brushes
this is the final result using practically all the brushes and a smudger, use tonal correction to make it better at least for my taste the colors
another example
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