![]() ![]() fade will feather out your stroke but you still can’t feather it in. But PS6 offers control over only the following parameters afaik: brush size, opacity and general Photoshop fill mode (normal, multiply, dissolve, color etc.), plus a check box for wet edges and a set of 3 params for "brush dynamics" that have some usefulness but are pretty limited. So the brush is still the same brush, but one version offers special Brush, one offers History Art Brush, one offers the combination of all previous version including newer option/feature like being able to add or change the effect of the brush stroke.Īnd with the right tool and talent you may be able to use Photoshop to draw a much better painting and quicker than specific program designed for drawing/painting. – BUT each newer version of Photoshop often add newer or more feature/option to the existing tools. – There is or should be NO DIFFERNCE because drawing is drawing, there is no magical able the basic drawing stroke. You’re right, though, the only way to really tell is to try it.īefore you giving it a try I may be able to give you some general information just incase you may be so disappointed. The old brush line was almost like a marker in appearance. So, I’m guessing the pressure sensitivity is much improved. If CS4/5 has improved, parameterized drawing tools I’d certainly buy it, despite it’s being somewhat overpriced.īut you can answer the question yourself by downloading the full version for a 30-day trial period. Photoshop 6 has everything I want except for versatile drawing support. I think a lot of its users export PSD and color in PS. BTW, the color support in Manga Studio is not very good. I think the first program that did something like this was the Fractal Design Expressions (vector art that looked like raster art) which I also owned and liked back in the day. Using MS made me realize that that’s one of the things I really want in a program, but not sure if the later Photoshop made any improvements in this area. However, I do really like the way their pen tool (which would equate to the photoshop brush tool) smooths out the hand-drawn line and results in something that looks a lot like drawing with a sable brush and ink on paper. ![]() Its comics-related features are nice to have, but I don’t really need them. I’m researching contemporary software and am evaluating Manga Studio 4. Now I need to do some graphics-intensive work now that could probably best be described as cartoony illustration. I still use PhotoshopĦ.0.1, Illustratior 8 (or Freehand 9) and Fireworks 4 for graphics. I stopped doing full-time graphics work back around the turn of the century and have not kept up with the latest S/W. Question does the brush tool in recent Photoshop function basically like the brush tool in PS 6.0.1? ![]()
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