There are three tools that don't exist in real-world coloring, but are fun if you don't want to actively color something. The color fill tool does what it suggests, fills a section with a color. The linear gradient tool gives you an airbrushed look with shadows and highlights going from one side to the other. The radial gradient tool is similar, but works from a center point, outward.
The five other tools are the pencil, angle-tipped marker, brush (like a paint brush), airbrush, and circle-tipped marker. You can adjust the opacity and thickness of each tool for varying shades and textures. I tend to work in 100 percent opacity with a five percent line thickness because it seems the most realistic.
Pat
Sent from my iPad Pro2
Here's one I took a screen shot of. Do you know how to get the gradient circle to go from light to dark starting in the middle of the circle instead of dark to light? Input a blog of purple on the background for an example. I want the gradient to be may the opposite of what it shows.That picture looks great! Have you tried using different shades from the color palette in Pigment to obtain the same effect?
Pat
Sent from my iPad Pro2
> On Apr 2, 2016, at 4:37 PM, Alice Saunders lwr32@mac.com [iPad] <iPad@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
>
> I'm trying to do shading and gradients like I did in this picture I did in Color Therapy. Color Therapy does it automatically with the colors.
Posted by: Pat Taylor <pat412@mac.com>
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