![]() Each brush has several settings for different paint looks. I generally use the watercolor or oil brushes, but may also use crayons and color pencils. This way I can turn on or off the visibility for each layer to see what I like or don't like. I paint on new layers, keeping objects and new painted effects on separate layers. The fourth icon fron the right on the bottom of the ArtRage interface is the layers icon. I add a new layer above the painting so I am not working directly on the painting. Then click on the eye icon, and the painting will show at full opacity. It looks like three horizontal lines one below the other. Tracing options is the third icon from top in the same bottom icon. To see the painting at full opacity, click on "Convert to Paint" under tracing options. It comes into the program as a tracing image at 40% opacity. Click on the second to right bottom icon to import the photo. Then I import the photo of the painting into ArtRage. As you are working, the row of tools and the color picker will disappear when you click on the active tool and color giving you more canvas to view and work with. Below is a screenshot of the ArtRage interface with a new blank painting. I open a new painting in the ArtRage iPad app. To get the painting into the iPad, I take a photo with my iPhone or iPad of the painting trying to get close enough so the painting covers as much of the painting as possible. I I use either the ArtRage or Procreate apps. This technique can be used for any art medium. I like using the iPad for decision making when I get stuck on where to go next in the painting process in acrylic painting. I love using the videos as tools to help me remember my process and to help me remember how I got certain effects. Near the end of the painting, I accidentally added a big green line across the girl's face when I was pinching out the screen to magnify the area I was working on. I used some copy and paste and transform in the painting. The progress video shows me adding a second image on top of the first image and then keeping only parts of it. Most of the ArtRage painting gets covered up, but I like to leave some of the texture. Then I usually save the image and open it up in Procreate. This painting started out in ArtRage, as do many of my iPad paintings, because I love to capture the oil brush and watercolor brush textures. Sometimes I find a place where there was something I liked but got changed. Watching the video, it is interesting and helpful for me to see my process. The video above shows an unfinished Procreate painting in progress. At any point, you can click on the little wrench (Actions) icon at the top left of the screen, then click on share and then send your video to email, Dropbox, ITunes, or even save it to your iPad Photos. While you are working on any painting in Procreate, Procreate is automatically making a video of your work in progress behind the scene. In this post I'll talk a little about recording video in the Procreate app. Procreate, SketchClub, Sketchbook Pro, are some current paint programs that allow you to create videos of your paintings in process. There are a few iPad painting programs that either automatically record your paintings as they are created or that you can set beforehand to record as you paint. ![]()
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