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Fabric brush

PostPosted: 10 Oct 2013, 04:30
by maninmachine
Purpose:
Primary - various fabrics ranging from dense to threadbare, fine to coarse. Secondary - works as a shader and an 8-bit style block stacker.

Parameters and behavior schemes:
Does not require stylus.
Random color, value, scales.
The rotation parameter has something I saved as "Stacker". The shape initially turns to follow your stroke but very quickly becomes stuck. This is useful as an on-the-fly constant direction controller. Helps maintain the manufactured look of fabrics, and makes block stacking easier.

Comments on use:
For coarse fabrics use higher opacity, fine fabrics use lower opacity. Density is controlled by stroke concentration. Changing the magnitude of the negative and positive boundaries for the value slider will change the thread shade variation. Try turning on a gradient for weird effects (can pretty easily do those multi-color weaves). For a sharp variance (plaid, cyber) effect try changing the value behavior scheme to random -> multiply (x) -> floor, where X is some number greater than 1. The lower you go with X, the more the value will tend towards the lower boundary and vice versa.

Hope you like it. :eek:

fabthumb.jpg
fabthumb.jpg (21.56 KiB) Viewed 48474 times


fabdemo.jpg
fabdemo.jpg (78.73 KiB) Viewed 48474 times





To moderators: Would you prefer if I condensed my brush submissions into one thread? This is my first time on a forum, and I don't mean to clutter.

Re: Fabric brush

PostPosted: 10 Oct 2013, 04:35
by maninmachine
Here's an example of the stacker behavior scheme:
stacker2.jpg
stacker2.jpg (19.59 KiB) Viewed 48473 times

The left hand side is the start. Notice how it rotates at first then becomes stuck even as the stroke direction changes.

Here's an example of the cyber (high variance with green and black) effect:
fabcyber.jpg
fabcyber.jpg (37.6 KiB) Viewed 48473 times

Re: Fabric brush

PostPosted: 10 Oct 2013, 10:19
by bonnie
Congratulation for your brushes and your explanations :yeah:

To moderators: Would you prefer if I condensed my brush submissions into one thread?
This is my first time on a forum, and I don't mean to clutter.


Please don't condense your submissions because there is the preview of your creation.
I think it is easier to see all brushes like that but later why not to open a MIM Workshop!

Just one little thing, could you forget the [ ] for your file name because each time I donwload your brushes to test it I need to change your name "Fabric %5BMIM%5D.bkbrush" ;)

Thank you

Re: Fabric brush

PostPosted: 11 Oct 2013, 17:25
by fusebreaker
Very Cool! Thank you and well done!

Re: Fabric brush

PostPosted: 12 Oct 2013, 01:51
by dirtyklingon
not seeing downloads for the other two brushes.

anyways looking forward to giving all of these a try in my next session.

Re: Fabric brush

PostPosted: 12 Oct 2013, 23:20
by maninmachine
Thank you for the kind replies. I apologize for the naming issue; I'll leave off the brackets in all future submissions. I really don't want to discourage submissions of variations of a brush archetype, and I realized I wasn't being very creative with my naming conventions. Name tags are the easiest route for me. A workshop sounds fun! And I'll try to upload the presets of those samples at some point soon. :)

Edit: Here are the samples. I noticed a weird effect with the stacker that it will tend towards the rotation of a previous stroke at the start. Clicking and not drawing anything seems to clear that result. I guess that makes it easier to do gradually rotating stacks.

Re: Fabric brush

PostPosted: 26 Jan 2015, 09:04
by ptfeadhesive
Great Post. This post helps to me.