This is a continuation of last week’s tutorial on creating brushes from dingbats. This week, I’ll show you how to save off brushes and brush sets (.png images, too!), and then next week we’ll go about organizing them for quick finding and loading later. :)
The key thing to remember about saving brushes is that Photoshop will save everything you have in your brush selector dropdown as a brush set, no questions asked. Kind of annoying if you ask me, but nobody did, so there it is. :P What this means for us is that we must delete the brushes that are in the brush selector, leaving only our new brushes, in order to save them as a set.
In Photoshop Elements 5, I like to start with a small brush set, like “Thick Heavy Brushes”, which only has 5 brushes to delete before we save our set. Let’s get started making and saving our very own brush sets. :)
1. Select your Brush tool (b).
2. Drop down the brush selector in the Options Bar at the top of your screen.
3. In Photoshop Elements, you’ll see a dropdown box with the various predefined brush sets in it. Select Thick Heavy Brushes from the dropdown.
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NOTE: In PSCS/CS2/CS3, you’ll need to click the small arrow button and select Thick Heavy Brushes from the flyout menu (remember to click OK rather than Append).
4. Now type, draw, import, scan, or otherwise create an image, then create the brush from it (Tutorial on this from last week is here) .
When you drop down the brush selector after creating your brush, your new brush is at the end of the list. Now it’s time to clean out the brushes we don’t want.
5. Drop down the brush selector in the Options Bar.
6. Right-click on one of the brush thumbnails and choose Delete. Click OK in the following dialog box.
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7. Repeat step 6 for all the remaining brushes in the list, except the one(s) you want to save into your brush set.
You can add more brushes to your set before saving, simply by creating more new brushes at this time.
When you’ve got all the brushes you’d like in your brush list, saving them is easy. :)
1. With the Brush tool selected, drop down the brush selector in the Options Bar.
2. Click the little arrow button to the right of the dropdown panel.
3. Choose Save Brushes from the flyout menu.
4. Navigate to a place on your system where you’d like to store your brush set, and give it a name.
5. Click OK.
Now you have a portable, installable .abr file, all ready to go!
Next week we’ll talk about organizing all those pesky .abr files. :) (HINT: don’t throw away the .png files that come with your brush sets…)
Have a super, Phabulous Photoshop Phriday, and a great weekend!
To answer some of the questions that have come up from this:
1. The brushes you delete are not gone forever, but simply from your current interface. If you select the drop-down again, they’ll all be re-loaded. :) Deleting is simply for the purpose of creating the set you’re planning to save.
2. Archiving brushes is the same as archiving any digital item - use an external hard drive, back up to CDs or DVDs, or you could use an online backup service like Carbonite. :)