Choosing brushes
You can choose from the following brush tools:
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Paint Brush — creates strokes of color that simulate strokes from
an artist’s paintbrush. Brushstrokes can have hard or soft edges.
The Paint Brush is a multipurpose tool that can be used to edit an
image by applying color to areas as small as a single pixel. This
tool can be used to adjust transparency in specific areas or to
create a selection. For more information, see To create a selection
by using a Painting tool.
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Airbrush — simulates an airbrush or spray can. The longer you
apply the brush to an area, the more pronounced the effect
becomes.
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Warp Brush — produces a warping effect on image pixels. You
can twirl areas of the image, contract or expand parts of the
image, and create other interesting effects. For more information,
see Warping images.
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Picture Tube — lets you paint with a collection of preset objects.
For example, you can add butterflies and beetles to a picnic
setting, fill an aquarium with fish, or frame a picture with holly.
You can use the picture tubes included with Corel PaintShop Pro
or create your own. For more information, see Using the Picture
Tube tool.
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Eraser — causes pixels to become transparent. For more
information, see Erasing image areas.
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Background Eraser — erases pixels selectively. For more
information, see Erasing image areas.
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Clone Brush — lets you edit your image by using parts of the
image, or parts of another image, as a paint source. For more
information, see Removing flaws and objects.
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Color Replacer — replaces a color in a selection or layer with
another color. For more information, see Replacing colors,
gradients, or patterns.
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Retouch Brushes — let you retouch images. Some retouch brushes
mimic photographic effects. Others change pixels based on
lightness, saturation, hue, or color values. Some retouch brushes
are similar to color correction commands in the effects they
produce.
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