The Linear burn mode blends the colors of the blending layer by darkening the colors of the base layers. This blending mode darkens the colors and increases the contrast of the base colors, then blends the colors of the blending layer. The Color burn mode is named after the photography film development technique of “burning” or overexposing prints to make the colors darker. This mode is useful for coloring shadows. The Multiply mode multiplies the colors of the blending layer and the base layers, resulting in a darker color. The Darken mode compares the colors of the blending layer and the base layers, and keeps the darker colors. In Normal mode, the color is simply placed on top of the color of the layer below. Different graphics software may have different blending modes. So this is a good moment to again show interest in implementing this option in Krita.These examples are in Clip Studio Paint. So a Krita or PS ‘blending button’ could be done for the masked brushes as well. Yes, however, here is stated that the code is shared between them. Yeah, but this was for texture brushes, not masked. I as in favor of it, but not many people showed interest. Okay, so what to do with this wall of information? Here on the testing of the New Texture for Brushes Deif_Lou asked if people would like a option to use the Photoshop way, or Krita way (probably a toggle button). The third one is just a theoretical variation. Overlay) there are 3 screenshots, the first is the PS’s way and the second is Krita’s way. When introducing the modes (per example, 3.1.1. You can see how their differ here, where the new modes are proposed. While discussing the new texture blending for brushes, explained that Krita and Photoshop uses a sightly different math. A Krita only user could think Photoshop, CSP, Artstudio or Procreate were wrong in their masked brushes. It is also fair to assume the ‘right’ way is the one you were exposed first. They are related to the math the program uses to blend the Mask and the Brushtip, and it is fair to say 99% of users will never know this as is a kind of technical knowledge. The initial problems seemed to be linked to the bug, that Krita doesn’t use transparent PNG brushes properly (hopefully fixed soon). I hope the developers can share some insight on that and maybe something can be done to equalize the both versions. In Krita however, this never happens - no matter how hard I press. At full pressure the main brush takes over at some point in Photoshop. Especially at very low pressure, the brush in Krita is almost invisible. In Krita, the opacity of the Masked Brush fluctuates and is less consistent. As you can see in the example below (the top two strokes are from Photoshop - the lower two from Krita … once with Masked Brush enabled and once without), the opacity of the masked brush in Photoshop always seems to be 100% but the overall opacity of the brush is dictated by the main brush. However, the results looks very different. Anyway.Īs for the blending of the Masked Brush, I can’t find the “Color Burn” option so I assume the “Burn” option is equal to the “Color Burn” option from Photoshop. There the brushes are pretty much the same as the original - especially Artstudio Pro does a great job. It’s not easy and I wish the ABR import function was more sophisticated like in Procreate or Artstudio Pro. I’m still in the process of recreating my favorite brushes from Photoshop.
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