![]() ![]() If I didn't take the time to take screenshots and save them out, it would have taken me about a minute to blend this region, maybe a little less. Select Tablet Settings from the left menu. This is my final result after using the Gaussian blur filter brush set to 50 by 50 pixels blur. In the Settings Menu, select Configure Krita. ![]() The filter brush lets you apply a filter to just part of your image with a simple brushstroke. This is where I was in about twenty seconds:įrom here, if you want to make your blend even more disgustingly smooth, pick the filter brush and set the filter to Gaussian blur. Pick a color and use light to medium strokes to paint the gradient. This gives you a lot of colors between those two to choose from while you're blending. Then do the same thing with the color from the other side. Anyway, you should pick the color from one side (Krita uses Ctrl+click for this), and paint the color from one side to the other. (You can adjust brush size with just like in Photoshop, or if you use Shift+click you can drag the brush to the exact size you want.) The color smudge brush works by painting color when you press hard, and by smudging the underlying color when you press soft. ![]() Once you're back to your canvas, if you want to blend across both regions of color, you should make two strokes with a big color smudge brush, both with medium-light pressure. Or, you can test the brush out on that empty white space to the right of the brush settings. Click "Color Smudge Brush" on the left, and go back to your canvas where you have something to blend: To get to the brush settings, click the button in the toolbar. I find it a lot quicker to get a really smooth blend in Krita because of its color-smudge and filter brushes.
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