
IF you want the GIMP to be able to use your new brush, you have to save it in the “brushes” folder inside your personal GIMP folder (for Linux and other UNIX systems, this is usually in “~/.gimp-2.10/brushes/”). The last step is to export your brush as a GIMP picture brush. xcf format now, in case you want to edit it later. At the end your layers should look something like this (see image above). In our case we will be drawing a picture of a happy face in 3 colours (red, green and yellow). Step 3 ¶ĭraw the images you want in the layers that were already created. The layer name really don’t matter in this case. We will be just naming them Layer1, Layer2, and Layer3. Go to the Layers dialog and create additional layers with the fill type Transparent (if necessary, delete or clear the background layer if you forgot to make it transparent when creating the image). For our example, we will be creating a 64圆4 image. Step 1 ¶Ĭreate a new image the size of the brush you will be creating. However, in this tutorial we will be creating brushes that use pictures with colour and this brush will also have multiple images. This means that any pixel that is pure white is treated as transparent. The content of such a brush is treated line an alpha-channel. Complex black and white brushes can be created by saving a grayscale image as using the. Simple shapes are created using the button labelled Create a new brush at the bottom of the brush selection dialog or right click and select New Brush. Intention ¶Īlong with the brushes already included, you can create custom brushes using three methods. Lad and may not be used without permission of the author.

Text and images Copyright (C) 2002 Gautam N.
