Custom Brushes with Photoshop
Making custom brushes is one of the easiest things in the world.
Seriously! I don't know why I've read some tutorials that make
it out to be this multi-step, intimidating process. Creating
your own brushes helps to customize both your artwork and the
Photoshop work environment.
The Hard Part
"But ... you said this would be easy!!" Technically, yes, but
I've found that some people actually reach a little stumbling
block when trying to think of what would make a good brush.
Well, the short answer is ANYTHING! I've made brushes out of
fuzzy leopard slippers, bananas, old trash cans, fabric
swatches, dirt ... hundreds of things. It helps to have a
scanner and/or a digital camera ... that really opens up your
possibilities. Just a quick walk around your house might yield
dozens of fun textures you can make brushes out of. But, even if
you don't have either of those, you can often snurch some good
textures off the internet. Try a google search for marble tile
and see what comes up. Sometimes you'll get a nice big image to
work with. I'm not condoning stealing someone's art photos to
rip a brush off with, but if it's just a sample photo of tile,
or fabric, or screen, or whatever, I think it's perfectly fine
... you'll be drastically changing the image in the next steps
anyway.
The Next Steps
Okay, so you've got some good textures then? Right, let's make a
custom brush out of 'em! Open up your image in Photoshop. The
first thing you'll want to do is desaturate the image
(Shift+Ctrl+U in PS7). Then cut and paste what you've got into a
new layer. Now delete the background layer. Once you're down to
just the single layer, mess with the brightness/contrast until
you get the desired effect (this will require you to think a
little bit about how you might use the brush in the future -
will you be wanting to use it as a 'grunge' effect ... something
more technical ... etc. etc.)
If you view the URL's below, you can see images of the brush
creation.
http://www.jvmediadesign.com/blog/img/tutorials/brush_tut1.jpg (
The starting image)
http://www.jvmediadesign.com/blog/img/tutorials/brush_tut2.jpg
(The desaturated image)
http://www.jvmediadesign.com/blog/img/tutorials/brush_tut2.jpg
(After messing with brightness/contrast)
The Super Easy Part
Now that you've got the image looking like you want, you'll need
to create it as a Photoshop brush. Go to 'Edit' then choose
'Define Brush'. Give your new brush a name and that's it!! Easy,
huh?
Saving All Your Hard Work
There are few things worse than having hundreds of cool brushes
gone in an instant. It's happened to me on one occasion where my
hard drive fried out and I didn't save all my customized
Photoshop stuff. So I'm going to help you avoid any tragedies
and tell you how to save your brushes. Once you've got an amount
of brushes made (I personally like to create 'sets' of brushes
that all kind of work together, or just happened to fit my mood
that day!), go to 'Edit' then choose 'Preset Manager'. A window
with all your current brushes will pop up. You can click on each
little square individually. What you're going to want to do is
shift+right click on the series of brushes you want to save.
Once you've done that, click on 'Save Set', give the set a name
and save it to your computer (of course these brush files are
what you're going to want to back up!). There, you're done!
How To Get Other Custom Brushes Into Your Pallet
If you've found a cool brush set on the web and you'd like to
use them, after you download the file (usually a zip file),
you'll want to extract them to your Photoshop/Brushes directory.
To load a brush set in Photoshop, open the Brushes Palette
('Windows', 'Palettes', 'Show Brushes'). Select Load Brushes
from the menu on the Brush Palette and choose your file. That's
it!