Dry brush effect
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- acescence0
I read a christopher lee interview and he said he uses only illustrator. this does not help you though, sorry.
- tasty0
my first thought is....
1. Make shape with gradient in it
2. filter> add noise...adjustBut there are probably brush sets that achieve this effect
- baseline_shift0
as tasty said, add noise to your gradients.
or, you can set layers to 'dissolve' in pshop, and adjust their opacity.
i would also bet their are brush sets you can download with this kind of thing.
- frost2150
oops i forgot to mention...i wanted to do a vector dry brush effect. Chris lee also said he uses the roughen filter to make his vector lines look more hand drawn.
- inkpink0
- link not workinfrost215
- i can see it.. ?inkpink
- http://imgur.com/GAJā¦inkpink
- oh weird img.ur seems to not like direct link... copy and paste the url into your browserinkpink
- IMGUR hasnt been working with qbn lately. its so odd.baseline_shift
- click link > opens new window > click on address bar > press return = workie for all imgurjaylarson
- johndiggity0
you could apply some brush effects to your stroke and expand them to get the handrawn appearance as well. could also go over your lines with the pencil tool if you have a wacom.
- Gucci0
Good question. I read an article last year that said that a lot of illustrators still us Painter to make their illustrations feel more hand made. I tried Painter.... I will never do that again.
- inkpink0
i would suspect that the 2nd gnome image (amanda?) is a different technique... that background looks like its been brushed in photoshop. not uniform like chris's textured objects.