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Sketchbook pro pressure sensitivity not working
Sketchbook pro pressure sensitivity not working












sketchbook pro pressure sensitivity not working

You can also change the size of the mask using the Size slider, and its effects will scale the same way. This means the further you zoom inward, the smaller its effects will be - very useful for working with the details. The soft mask stays the same size regardless of your zoom level. Here you can choose to delete everything on a particular layer, or clear everything in the image. If you want to remove strokes completely, try selecting them with a tap+hold and then use Delete, or use the Slice tool to incise and delete sections or destroy them from the canvas.ĭouble-tap the mask button to open a Quick Clear menu. You can still retrieve old strokes later, or adjust your mask as your drawings progress. It visually removes anything underneath it like a lovely soft eraser, but the data isn't actually gone. But vectors aren’t pixels, they behave and remember data differently, and if you're comfortable with programs like Adobe Photoshop or Autodesk Sketchbook Pro, the soft mask tool will function similarly to masking tools in aforementioned software.

sketchbook pro pressure sensitivity not working

In a traditional pixel-based world, erasers delete things permanently. Also check that your transparency is above 0%, or like all strokes it may disappear, only to be found when Selecting in the area. Otherwise your shape will disappear into a line or a point as though the rest of the stroke never happened. Since Fill takes into account the start and end points of your line, make sure Line Smoothing is set below 100%.

sketchbook pro pressure sensitivity not working

Excellent for shadows, light, and complex figures, we think you’ll appreciate the possibilities this brush offers your design + art toolkit. Your resulting fill is a smooth, clean finish, customizable with opacity. Of course, if you draw over the area a third time within the same stroke, it becomes positive again and is filled. This crossing over of filled area causes it to become “negative space” and remain empty. "Positive space" refers to any area inside your drawn line between start and end point that is original to the stroke - as in, the area hasn’t been drawn over a second time during the same stroke. It allows you to draw any type of shape - simple, wriggly, complex - with a stylus or finger, and fill the positive space inside. Not to be confused with Bucket Fill (which we’re currently working on - lots of definitional bits to think about with the interactive parameters of vector strokes), the Filled Stroke tool is a brush unique to Concepts.














Sketchbook pro pressure sensitivity not working