After this is just roughing or smoothing up the edges of the tip, no texture in the tip you will only have a slow brush and nothing else. For an example if you need a rough watercolour brush you just need to create a basic shape, circle or square, and in the brush options go to the brush tip and put thickness and direction at random. Second useful thing, for the trasparency "paint", is that the brush tip and texture is not so much relevant as in photoshop. With this you can create a HUGE cromatic gamma without selecting a different colour every time or creating a new layer, something that you need to do in photoshop. I make an example make a red circle after this take the watecolour brush and select the blue, try to paint on the red circle and you will create a purple colour. This is REALLY useful for two reasons, first you can create brushes that mix the paint on layer. I found out that people, or at least the one I know, who only worked with photoshop for illustration and painting having an hard time adapting to Clip Studio Paint because for ONE SIMPLE REASON, that you can use the trasparency as a "paint". I will start with the second point that is much more easier to approach. ![]() It depends on what you mean with realistic drawing and on HOW you use the brushes and your workflow in someway.
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