
Color 229
5 Choose Multi from the Stroke Type list box.
6 Choose Window Brush Control Panels Well .
7 In the Wel l panel, enable the Brush Loading check box.
This step activates the brush’s ability to pick up underlying colors.
8 Adjust the Resaturation and Bleed sliders.
The Bleed setting determines how much underlying paint is affected by the
brushstroke. A higher Bleed setting, combined with a low Resaturation setting,
can enhance the Brush Loading feature. A resaturation value of 0, combined with
different levels of bleed, will cause your brush to smear image color, rather than
deposit it. In this case, the lower the bleed, the longer the smear.
9 Choose Window Brush Control Panels Spacing.
10 In the Spacing panel, adjust the Spacing and Min Spacing sliders to create fewer
“echo” artifacts in your smeared stroke.
11 Drag a brushstroke through existing paint to see how the paint is “picked up” from
the underlying pixels and moved across the canvas.
It is easier to see the Brush Loading feature if the canvas is not white. To fill
the canvas with another color, see “Applying a color as a fill” on page 230.
You can tie brush controls like Bleed to the Controller setting in the
Color Expression panel. For example, if you choose Pressure, each stroke
bleeds more or less, depending on how hard you press the stylus. For more
information, see “Expression settings” on page 317.
Working with color fills
Corel Painter gives you many options for filling images with color. You can apply a color
fill to only part of an image, to a layer of an image, to an alpha channel, or to an entire
image. You can also fill image areas based on pixel color.
In addition, you can apply gradients, patterns, and weaves as fills. The following table
lists the various ways to apply fills to an image and where to find more information.
Fill type For more information see
Color “Applying a color as a fill” on page 230
Gradient “Applying gradients” on page 693
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