Is it just me? or do brushes feel different on different software? im not taking about performance if its slower or faster, taking about a stroke feels, curved, straight, how the direction and flow of the stroke is made. Like I feel drawing a circle in CSP is not the same at all as drawing a circle in Photoshop for example. and im sure probably feels different on Krita too.Is this because of the brush engine? I thought it was mostly a general tablet feature.Now I wonder schizophrenic if shit like this actually hinders my art or not. Currently using Clip Studio Paint.
>Now I wonder schizophrenic if shit like this actually hinders my art or not.You're probably just a baby bird. Get some pencils and a sketchbook/printer paper and start there. Build a feel of what it means to use pressure (mileage) and then go back to the tablet and tweak your pressure settings from the wacom settings. You won't know what "feels right" without using a pencil first imo.
>>7979554Absolutely yes, different programs have different brush engines
>>7979554yes
>>7979554I think CSP feels better to draw and sketch on than photoshop. I think Photoshop feels better to paint with than CSP, but maybe that's just because I'm more used to PS for that.
>>7979554CSP uses stabilizer, Photoshop does not
>>7979554Yes. The technical answer would be wasted on this board, but here's the dummy answer. Your stroke is filtered by 2 distinct interface layers Brain -> HandHand -> CanvasThe computer adds a third layer, between hand to canvas that we'll just call "Tech"Depending on the implementation of the tech the brain is given a much different calibration datastream. The simplest example is active stylus tech like apple pencil vs the passive stylus of wacom. The active stylus has to calculate a valid "Path" that it then streams to the computer, which does not occur with a passive stylus, which will instead generate a stroke based on the absolute position of the stroke tool. tl;dr - Yeah it matters, use Sai. Pic related my strokes.