I used Paint Shop Pro - it has oil brush, palette knife and smear, although I think part of the control issue was that the person whose brush they were emulating doesn't use a brush quite the way I do, and the smear tool has too much randomness built into it so it's like smearing with a very big sponge or something : you get smear effects outside of the area of the 'brush'.
Possibly specialist paint software that isn't also trying to be a photo retouching and vector editing suite would be better.
Ooh, that's pretty! Lovely colors. I'm impressed by the brush strokes and palette knife smears you can achieve in that program, it's very realistic. Are there watercolor-like brushes as well?
I have an ancient tablet laptop and you can use a stylus as a brush/pen on the screen. I tried experimenting with some free painting software but didn't like the outcome AT ALL. Obviously with the proper tools (like an actual artist's tablet and painting software) like you have the outcome is much better. :D
I really liked the smearability - but no, this particular program (Paintshop Pro) can't do watercolour, only oil.
It does have chalk, pastel, crayon, coloured pencil, marker and 'finger smear' but I don't think they are as good as the oil simulator... I suspect that painting software that was just focussed on the painting side of things would have more options.
I don't think I can really justify buying Corel Painter 12 at a hundred quid to experiment further, but I am quite tempted by the cut-down Corel Painter Essentials at £27...
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Possibly specialist paint software that isn't also trying to be a photo retouching and vector editing suite would be better.
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I have an ancient tablet laptop and you can use a stylus as a brush/pen on the screen. I tried experimenting with some free painting software but didn't like the outcome AT ALL. Obviously with the proper tools (like an actual artist's tablet and painting software) like you have the outcome is much better. :D
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It does have chalk, pastel, crayon, coloured pencil, marker and 'finger smear' but I don't think they are as good as the oil simulator... I suspect that painting software that was just focussed on the painting side of things would have more options.
I don't think I can really justify buying Corel Painter 12 at a hundred quid to experiment further, but I am quite tempted by the cut-down Corel Painter Essentials at £27...
Reply
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