Adobe Fresco
Essential Equipment
Adobe Fresco is currently available
for use on the Apple iPad.. The app supports iOS version 12.4 or later running
on the following hardware: all models of iPad Pro; iPad Air 3rd generation;
iPad 5th and 6th generations; and the iPad mini 5th generation.
You’ll want to use the 2nd generation
Apple Pencil to make full use of Adobe Fresco brushes. This generation is only
compatible with the iPad Pro 12.9-inch and iPad Pro 11-inch.
Using Adobe Fresco with Photoshop and Illustrator
While there’s some overlap in terms
of functionality among existing digital art applications by Adobe, each program
has specific capabilities that make the Creative Cloud suite the toolkit
of choice for many professional artists. Adobe Photoshop has long served as the
industry standard for photo editing and pixel-level retouching. Many
professionals use Adobe Illustrator for drawing. Adobe has positioned Fresco as
its easy-to-use, wide-ranging mobile creativity tool that integrates with each.
You can use Fresco to create both
raster (pixel-based) or vector (scalable line-based) art, mix the two in a
single piece of art, and easily move your images back and forth among Fresco,
Photoshop, Illustrator, and other Adobe applications to enhance your work as
needed.
Creating A New Drawing
After downloading and launching
Fresco, get started on your first drawing by tapping the “Create New” button on
the Home screen. Choose from one of the preset image sizes, or create your own
custom size to open up a blank canvas.
Before we put Apple Pencil to digital
paper, let’s take a look at some of the features that make Fresco so fun and
easy to draw with.
If there’s one thing that truly sets
Fresco apart from other illustration and paint applications, it’s the array and
functionality of brushes available to users. There are three kinds of brushes:
raster, vector, and live.
Live Brushes
For many users, live brushes provide
Fresco’s defining characteristic, and serve as a source of creative
inspiration. Live brushes are Fresco’s tools for oil painting and watercolor
that recreate the experience and results of using real brushes to an extent
that astonishes many users.
Using live brushes, digital paints
interact with each other and with your screen’s virtual paper just as they
might in real life. Fresco’s oil paints have the same rich, saturated texture
and fluid brush strokes of their real-life counterparts, and they mix in a
remarkably realistic way. The watercolors are a revelation, too: the paint
blooms, darkens around the edges, and “stays wet” just like traditional
watercolors
Fresco’s oil brushes include flat,
round, filbert, detail, glaze, chunky, and short. Watercolor brushes are round
detail, wash soft, wash flat, and wet splatter.
Learn More About
Brushes With Artist Molly Egan
Digital Illustration: Using Adobe Fresco’s Live Brushes to Create
Beautiful Traditional Art
Raster Brushes
Raster art is often used for
websites, computer graphics — anything you don’t need to print. Adobe Photoshop
is a raster-based application, and Fresco is not only designed to work
seamlessly with Photoshop but also has a user interface that is very familiar
to Photoshop users.
Fresco includes 10 categories of
brushes: basic, comics, dry media, FX, ink, lettering, marker, painting,
rakes, and sketching. (You can also easily import your existing Photoshop
brushes directly into Fresco.) Pixel brush settings include hardness, blend
mode, shape dynamics, scattering, and transfer.
Vector Brushes
Line-based vector art scales up and
down in size and is widely used for anything that’s going to be printed, from
brochures to T-shirts to product packaging. Fresco’s brushes offer endless
possibilities for adding texture, style, and personality to vector paths and
shapes.
Fresco features five types of vector
brushes: basic round, basic taper, basic flat, basic chisel, and basic
terminal. Fresco’s vector brush settings are roundness, angle, taper, pressure
dynamics, and velocity dynamics, plus a smoothing option.
The eraser does a great deal more
than simply fix mistakes in Fresco; it’s a tool that can help you easily
enhance your drawing. Like brushes, there are different types of erasers
at your disposal: pixel and vector. Pixel eraser types include hard round
variable, brush tilt, gritty circle, and rectangle opacity, to name a few.
Vector erasers mirror vector brushes: basic round, basic taper, basic flat,
basic chisel, and basic terminal.
The eraser tool functions more like a
brush in Fresco, which means the distinctive edges and characteristics of a
specific brush type can be used to remove lines and color from
your drawing, too. The Touch Shortcut makes accessing and using this feature
incredibly easy.
Now that you’re all set up, it’s time
to draw! Open a new layer by clicking on the plus sign in the right side bar.
This separates your line work from the background canvas, so you can easily
edit as you work on your drawing. Choose a brush and brush size from the left
side bar — and start sketching! It’s that simple to begin.
Not Sure What To
Draw? Here’s Some Inspiration:
Things To Draw When You’re Out Of Ideas
How to Draw Shapes in Adobe Fresco
The app comes with a feature that
allows you to quickly create basic shapes that will elevate your drawing.
Access the Shapes tool by clicking on the overlapping triangle and circle icon
in the left side bar. A menu will pop up listing “Basic” shapes — circle,
polygon and square — or “Library” shapes, which allows you to create and
capture your own shapes and save them directly in the app for future use.
After choosing a shape from the menu,
simply tap the location where you’d like it to appear on your canvas. You can
change the size, fill the shape in with a color, and use the erase, mask and
select actions that pop up in the shape menu on the bottom of the screen.
One of the coolest things about Adobe
Fresco live brushes is the ability to paint and blend as if you’re using real
watercolor and oil paints. To try these features, first add another layer from
the right side menu; this is where you’ll paint. Choose a watercolor or oil
brush from the brush menu, then pick a color by clicking on the circle icon in
the left side bar.
The bottom three icons in the left
side bar — Flow, Paint Mix and Brush Settings — allow you to control how much
paint shows up on the canvas, how much a new brushstroke blends with existing
paint on the canvas, and how angle and pressure dynamics affect your
brushstroke. You can even choose the “Reload color” function in Settings, which
will load your digital brush with fresh paint before every brushstroke. Play
around with the different options as you color in your sketch.

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