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Digital Oil Painting In Corel’s Painter X; A Step-By-Step Guide To One Of Its Many Tools
Corel’s Painter (now in Version X) started years ago as a black and white
program called Sketcher, which came in a cigar box package. Over the years it
was owned by a variety of companies and was even sold in a paint can. The program
has matured and is unrivaled in its ability to mimic natural artistic mediums
like pastel, oil paint, charcoal, watercolor, and more.
2. The next step seems counterintuitive, but just trust me on this one. Choose Select>All, and then hit the delete button. The image disappears and a white canvas remains. But wait, there is more.
In the upper right-hand corner of the picture frame you will see an icon that
looks like a semitransparent white sheet of paper on top of a darker sheet.
This button will allow you to toggle back and forth with tracing paper. With
the tracing paper view turned on, you can see your original photo beneath. You
don’t have to be a Monet to use this program.
4. Although Painter has many types of Cloning Brushes, most of the brushes can be used in the Cloning Color mode. For our brush, I selected the Oils, and the variant selected was the Thick Wet Camel 30. There are so many brushes available in Painter and each comes with a myriad of variants.
The titles of the brushes are a good indication of how they will work. I wanted
a thick, wet oil paint that revealed the texture of the brush stroke on this
piece. If the title of the brush includes the word grainy, it will be affected
by the grain of whatever paper is currently selected. Take lots of brushes for
a test drive to see what you like.
Article Continues: Page 2 »
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