![]() ![]() Obviously when I paint, I want my eraser to be just like my paint brush, just removing paint instead of adding it. That’s a feature for me I hated it when I tried to paint anything in Artrage 5 and I was getting something weird and circular instead of the brush shape that I was using. Unfortunately, Krita even doesn’t have a separate eraser tool. And that really resolve the question in Krita. So, the plugin Rakurri linked create a virtual three groups with shortcut ability. In Clip Studio Paint the number of groups/tools and subtools is unlimited with ability to assign any shortcut to the tool/group, additional subtool and tool presets itself, plus you can put the tool into toolbar or floating panel on you wish. The painting tool group in Krita is only brush tool (don’t mention “Three brush” and vector tools ), Photoshop has brush, blending brush, eraser, smudge, burn/sponge tool, in Paint tool SAI you have nothing - for each preset you assign hotkey, PaintstormStudio have brush and eraser, Rebelle have 5 type of real media imitation with suboptions and something similar in Artrage. brush presets), and switching between tools is switch between groups with autoselect the last subtool presets of current group. Tool is bending to large group of actions (e.g. ![]() Krita eraser is just a mode, essentialy with key or toolbar button you switch tool into “erase/clear” blending mode. What AhabGreybeard and other said is what I mean. The facilities are there for you but you have to learn how to use them, which is not difficult. (All positioned in the same small area of the keyboard.) The choice of these two erasers was my choice and decision and I could have made my own custom erasers to use if I wanted to.Īll that was done using the keyboard shortcut customisation facilites and the built-in ‘Ten Brushes’ script. Then I press ‘backslash’ to go back to whatever brush I was using. If I press Ctrl+Shift+X, I get the default soft eraser and can erase with it. I then press ‘backslash’ to go back to whatever brush I was using. ![]() If I press Shift+X while painting then I get the default hard circular eraser and can erase with it. In particular, the use of the ‘E’ key to toggle a brush into and out of eraser mode causes confusion to first time users. This is true but krita uses a different principle of erasing, as is noted in the manual. I think what I9S means is that there’s no Toolbox icon that looks like an eraser and when clicked/selected switches to a tool that erases. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |