Choosing brush options
The brush options help you create hundreds of different brushstrokes. You can experiment with the options until you achieve the effect you want.
You can further customize the basic brush settings by specifying additional options on the Brush Variance palette. For more information about using the Brush Variance palette, see Customizing brush settings.
The following options are available on the Tool Options palette for painting tools:
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Shape — specifies the shape of the brush tip. You can create a
rectangular, elliptical, or angled brush tip by starting with the
round or square shape and modifying it with the Thickness and
Rotation options.
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Size — determines the size of the brush in pixels. You can adjust
the Size value by using the keyboard as well as by setting the Size
control in the Tool Options palette. For more information, see To
adjust the brush size by using the keyboard.
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Hardness — determines the sharpness of the brush edges. A
setting of 100 produces the sharpest edge; lower values produce
an increasingly softer, fading edge.
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Step — determines the time interval that elapses between
applications of paint, with each application defined as a single,
continuous brushstroke. Lower values produce a smoother, more
continuous appearance; higher values create a choppier
appearance.
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Density — determines the evenness of coverage produced by the
brushstroke (or for the Eraser tool, the evenness of the erasure).
Higher values produce more even coverage; lower values produce
spottier coverage, which resembles a spray-painted effect. When
using the Airbrush tool, you should set Density to values lower
than 100.
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Thickness — determines the width of the brushstroke. A setting of
100 produces a brush tip that is completely round or completely
square, depending on the Shape setting. As the Thickness setting
decreases, the brush becomes increasingly narrow.
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Rotation — applies rotation to a noncircular brush tip
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Opacity — determines how well the paint covers the image
surface. At 100% opacity, the painted brushstroke completely
covers the surface beneath it. At 1% opacity, the paint stroke is
almost completely transparent. For the Eraser tool, this setting
determines the level of erasing, so that a setting of 100%
produces the most transparent result.
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Blend mode — determines how painted pixels are blended with
pixels on underlying layers. The blend modes are the same as layer
blend modes. With the Paint Behind blend mode, for example,
painting is done behind the image on the active layer. No paint is
visible when the topmost layer and the active layer are both fully
opaque. For more information about blend modes, see Blending
layers.
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Rate — determines the rate at which the Airbrush tool applies
paint (from 0 to 50). A value of 0 applies a consistent amount of
paint even when the speed of the brushstroke varies. Higher
values apply more paint when the brush slows down or pauses.
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Stroke — lets you build up paint on existing paint strokes that
were applied with the Continuous check box marked. If the
Continuous check box is not marked, or if the check box is marked
but no strokes have been made, the Stroke button is grayed
(unavailable).
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Continuous — specifies whether paint builds up when multiple
brushstrokes are applied over the same area with opacity set at
less than 100%. If this check box is marked, painting produces a
continuous color, and repainting an area has no effect. To repaint
an area, you must click the Stroke button. If the Continuous check
box is unmarked (the default), each brushstroke over the same
area applies more paint; the color darkens until it reaches 100%
opacity.
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Wet Look Paint — mimics wet paint, with soft color inside and a
darker ring near the edge. The effect is more visible with lower
values for the Hardness setting.
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