I noticed that a few people were having problems with this, so I decided to post it.
♥ Do not re-write this tutorial and post it as your own.
♥ You may refer others to it if you need, but you need membership (join the community) to see it.
♥ This tutorial is made for Paintshop Pro 8, but I'm sure it can be translated into other versions.Photoshop, I don't know.
001. First, find an image you would like to use this on. I will be using this one.
002. Either save it to your computer and open it in your program, or just copy and paste as new image.
003. What I did was, I cropped my image so now it looks something like this.
004. Now I want to click on my brush tool, which looks somethinkg like this. Do you see where it says "Step?" The option looks like this. Click on that and move it all the way to 200.
005. The size of your brush should be 3 and the hardness should be 0, make sure it's correct.
006. Now, just have fun and see what you can come up with. You can also change the size and hardness, depening on what kind of look you want.
PHOTOSHOP: For Photoshop, if anyone asks, you have to click on the brush and then somewhere towards the top of the window there should be a 'More Options' button. Once you click on that, the first thing at the top says 'Spacing'. - Thanks,
itsfantastic!
This is my end result:

♥ Do not re-write this tutorial and post it as your own.
♥ This tutorial is made for Paintshop Pro 8, but I'm sure it can be translated into other versions.
001. First, find an image you would like to use this on. I will be using this one.
002. Either save it to your computer and open it in your program, or just copy and paste as new image.
003. What I did was, I cropped my image so now it looks something like this.
004. Now I want to click on my brush tool, which looks somethinkg like this. Do you see where it says "Step?" The option looks like this. Click on that and move it all the way to 200.
005. The size of your brush should be 3 and the hardness should be 0, make sure it's correct.
006. Now, just have fun and see what you can come up with. You can also change the size and hardness, depening on what kind of look you want.
PHOTOSHOP: For Photoshop, if anyone asks, you have to click on the brush and then somewhere towards the top of the window there should be a 'More Options' button. Once you click on that, the first thing at the top says 'Spacing'. - Thanks,
