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Feature Focus: Artists' Oils Painting System The Artists' Oils Painting System is a milestone in the evolution of digital art. This new painting system lets you apply paint blends created in the Mixer palette directly onto images in the document window. Each brush dab loads the brush variant with a finite amount of oil. As the oil runs out, the brush stroke becomes fainter. Brush strokes interact with any paint already on the canvas just as they would with natural media. ![]() © Cher Threinen-Pendarvis
(Click to enlarge.) The Artists' Oils Painting System has four components: 1. Artists' Oils Brush Category and Variants ![]() 2. Artists' Colors is based on the color measurements of real-world oil paints ![]() 3. Integration of Artists' Oils with the Mixer palette includes a new multicolor eyedropper ![]() 4. Artists' Oil Brush Controls provides the ability to control the amount of oil, viscosity, blend, bristling, clumpiness, brush trails and dirtiness ![]() (Click to enlarge.)
Brush variants from the Artists' Oils category let you mix paints as though you were working with traditional oil paints. You can use colors mixed on the Mixer palette and apply them directly to the canvas. You can then blend the colors with the oils already on the canvas. You can also load multiple colors from the Mixer palette on an Artists' Oils brush variant at the same time. Each stroke you create with an Artists' Oils brush variant loads the brush with a finite amount of oil, which is then transferred to the image. As you apply a stroke to the canvas, the Artists' Oil brush loses oil and the brush stroke becomes fainter. Because layers don't have the oily properties of the canvas, brush strokes applied to a layer don't fade as rapidly. Some Artists' Oils brush variants are palette knives, allowing you to mix paint directly on the canvas. ![]() Artists' Oils Brush Tips Six brush tip profiles are designed specifically for Artists' Oils brushes. Mixing Artists' Oils Paint On its own, the Mixer palette mimics the traditional experience of mixing colors on a palette. When used in tandem with an Artists' Oils brush variant, the Mixer palette offers digital artists as much color-mixing flexibility as its traditional counterpart. You can create a color on the Mixer palette and apply it to the canvas. You can also sample and paint with multiple colors. ![]() Artists' Oils Brush Controls The Artists' Oils Brush Controls are divided into three critical components: Paint, Brush and Canvas. You can vary the size and opacity settings of Artists' Oils brushes in response to changes in stylus pressure and speed by using tablet expression. Paint ![]() Artists' Oils brushes hold a finite amount of paint. As the paint runs out, the stroke becomes fainter.
Painting in Dirty Mode allows you to further replicate the experience of using artists' oils paints in the real world. In this mode, any paint remaining on the brush upon completion of a brush stroke is left to interact with paint loaded for the next brush stroke. When you select another color, the brush is cleared of remaining paint. The Grain Control The Grain slider affects the look of Artists' Oils by controlling the level at which paper absorbs paint. When the Grain slider is set to 0%, the paper absorbs a very limited amount of paint; no paper grain is visible in the stroke and the paint color appears lighter. When the Grain slider is set to 100%, the paper completely absorbs the paint; no paper grain is visible and the paint color appears darker. Grain is visible with Artists' Oils when the Grain slider is set between 1% and 99%. As an Artists' Oils brush runs out of paint, paper grain becomes more visible, so the Amount slider also affects how much grain appears. Give it a try! Download the Corel® Painter IX Trial from this Web site, and experiment with Artists' Oils by following these steps: Painting with Artists' Oils
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