|
Rangefinder Magazine
December 2004
Print this Page - Close this Page
Corel Painter
IX: by Jeremy Sutton
The “Must Have” Tool
Corel Painter IX, the fastest, most efficient and powerful
version of Painter yet released, is a “must have” tool for everyone
creating and working with digital fine art images. Painter, your digital art
studio, is a perfect complement to Photoshop, your digital darkroom. Both powerful
tools should be part of your standard digital toolbox. In this article I illustrate
some of the exciting new features of the recently launched Painter IX, such
as the wonderful new Artist’s Oils brushes, the improved Brush Tracker,
the versatile Custom Palettes and the handy Brush Controls palettes.
How is
Painter Different from Photoshop?
Painter IX, while looking, at first glance, similar to Photoshop CS, is a completely
different animal. Painter is the tool for any time you want to achieve an organic,
rich, natural media hand-painted look and feel to your image. There is some
overlap between Painter and Photoshop in basic image manipulation, special
effects, selections, text and layers, and considerable compatibility between
the two programs (some examples include: similar keyboard shortcuts, alpha
channels in Photoshop become Layer Masks in Painter, many layer blending modes
are the same, and so on).
Photoshop offers greater image adjustment control
with the use of Adjustment Layers and the ability to work in CMYK color mode,
while Painter offers an
unparalleled range of brushes and art materials, and a phenomenal degree of
brush stroke control that far surpasses anything I have seen in Photoshop or
any other program.
What Do You Need to Get Going?
The key to using Painter is using hand brush strokes to express your own unique
style and personality in your artwork. You will need a Wacom graphics tablet
with a pressure-sensitive pen. The two models I recommend for professional
work are the Intuos3 6x8 tablet and the Cintiq 18SX. When using the Intuos3,
place the spring-loaded “stroke” nib supplied with the tablet,
in the Grip Pen before you start—you’ll find it much better for
painting than the standard nib. The Cintiq 18SX combines a pressure-sensitive
surface with an LCD display (and is therefore very intuitive to use). I have
placed handy links on paintercreativity.com for purchase of tablets and Painter
IX.
Is It Worth Upgrading From Painter 8?
Absolutely! Painter IX is a much more powerful and stable program than Painter
8. Corel went back through the entire Painter code, some dating back to when
it was first created almost 15 years ago, and completely rewrote it. As a result,
all brushes work better (the Liquid Inks and Watercolor brushes are dramatically
faster in Painter IX as compared with Painter 8), and the program as a whole
is more stable. Also, there is a whole new category of brushes, called Artist’s
Oils. These have been designed to closer emulate the way traditional oil paint
mixes color on the brush and on the canvas as you apply a brush stroke. There
are many workflow improvements such as Quick Clone, Iterative Save, lockable
brushes in the brush Tracker, and the return of the Custom Palettes and access
to the full set of Brush Controls palettes in painting mode.
 |
 |
| Figure 1 |
Figure 2 |
Case Study Using
Artist’s Oils
For this case study (final painting shown in Figure 1) I started with a photograph
(the left-hand image in Figure 2) I took of a model, Elena, at a fashion show.
My goal was to create a painterly effect, which had something of the richness
of color and texture of Pino’s magnificent oils (see www.pino-artist.com/pino-art-collections.html).
New Preferences
My first step was to adjust the Preferences in Painter IX for optimum convenience.
The Brush Tracking preference allows me to adapt the pressure sensitivity of
the pen to suit my natural hand pressure. The new Customize Keys preference
gives the ability to create a custom key shortcut for virtually any menu item
or command anywhere in Painter.
Palette Layout
I then set up my palettes (see Figure 2). Besides the standard Colors palette
with its hue wheel and saturation-value triangle, I decided to make use of
the new Painter IX default color set, which is based on traditional oil paint
colors such as Burnt Umber, Raw Sienna, Yellow Ochre, Cadmium Red and Cerulean
Blue. I reset the Color Set palette to show just the color swatches (you can
also have color names displayed if you wish) and customized the swatch size
for convenience. I made my own Custom Palette of shortcut buttons for commands
I use frequently, such as Save As, Clone and Zoom to Fit. I also dragged a
couple of my frequently used brushes into the shortcuts palette. For added
convenience I locked a few more of my favorite brushes into the top of the
Trackers palette (lockable brushes is new to Painter IX), which saves me fishing
around the Brush Selector menus to locate brushes.
 |
 |
Figure 5 |
Figure 6 |
Quick Clone
As with all photographs I work on, once I am satisfied with the original source
image I have open in Painter, I then make a clone copy. A useful new Painter
IX feature for photographers is Quick Clone, which enables you to accomplish
several steps in one command. You can set the steps up in General Preferences
(Cmd/Ctrl-K). With Quick Clone you can, with one command, make a clone copy
of your photograph, clear the clone copy canvas to white, turn on Tracing Paper,
and activate Clone Color for the current brush. Let me take a step back to
explain cloning for those not familiar with Painter. Imagine the Photoshop
Rubber Stamp tool being able to transfer color information from an original
photograph to another, identically sized, canvas using the texture of any brush
in Painter, whether a chalk, an oil, a watercolor or a pastel. That is the
power of cloning in Painter. The artistic possibilities are endless. Not only
can you transform your image as if with a hand-painted brush “filter,” you
can also use the Tracing Paper feature to look through to the original image
for reference. Cloning frees you up from having to get the proportions and
color/tonal relationships of your subjects accurate through hand-eye coordination.
Instead you can focus on using your hand brush strokes to add energy, emotion,
movement, dynamism and focus to your image.
 |
 |
Figure 7 |
Figure 8 |
Muck Up
My first brush strokes are large general marks designed to create a rough under-painting
that I refer to as a “muck up,” since I am, in effect, mucking
up (messing up) the details of the image and creating an abstract composition
based on the main areas of color and tone. I use my muck-up brush strokes to
capture the flow and energy of my composition. In this example I also chose
to introduce additional colors in my muck (the central image in Figure 2).
One of the powerful aspects of transforming your photographs into paintings
is the additional richness and variety of color and tonal contrasts you can
introduce into your image. The muck-up brush I used in this case is Den’s
Oil Funky Chunky, one of my all-time favorites (made by Denise Laurent of London),
which you can find in the Jeremy Faves custom brush category that comes with
my book Painter 8 Creativity: Digital Artist’s Handbook (a completely
revised new Painter IX version will be out early 2005 with a whole set of new
custom brushes). I initially used Tracing Paper as visual reference while mucking
up, but then turned Tracing Paper off and just looked at the original photograph
on screen for further reference when I needed to. Tracing Paper can be distracting
and prevents you from seeing what you’re painting.
Iterative Save
Iterative Save is a great time-saving workflow device introduced in Painter
IX that allows you to conveniently document your process and safeguard your
work by saving a series of versions of your image, each with a sequentially
numbered file name (_001, _002, _003, and so on). I encourage you to take advantage
of this feature. I personally use Save As frequently since that allows me not
only include a sequential version number in my file names, but also add short
notes as to what brush I used etc.
 |
|
Figure 9 |
Figure 10 |
Sculpting with Blender Bristle
Once my muck up was complete (the entire canvas was covered in brush strokes),
I then set about sculpting the forms in more detail with one of the new Painter
IX Artist’s Oils brushes called Blender Bristle. I like the way this
brush blends with underlying color as it paints. The color falls off with the
brush stroke, so it encourages you to paint in brush dabs rather than long
strokes. I used the direction and the color of the dabs to sculpt the face,
hair and clothes of the subject (see right hand image in Figure 2). I continually
adjusted color, brush size and opacity as I applied this brush. (To change
brush size use the Brush Controls > Size menu or the Opt-Cmd/Alt-Ctrl shortcut,
which allows you to vary brush size by dragging as you paint) .
Soft Clone in
Selective Detail
At this stage I wished to start honing in on details such as the eyes, nose,
mouth and clothing. I used the Cloners > Soft Cloner brush with low opacity
(about 15 percent) and soft pressure to gently bring in some of the original
photographic detail. Be wary of bringing in too much detail. Less is more as
Walter Murch says in his book In the Blink of an Eye: “You may not always
succeed, but attempt to produce the greatest effect in the viewer’s mind
by the least number of things on screen. Why? Because you want to do only what
is necessary to engage the imagination of the audience. Suggestion is always
more effective than exposition. Past a certain point, the more effort you put
into wealth of detail, the more you encourage the audience to become spectators
rather than participants.”
 |
|
Figure 11 |
Figure 12 |
Smoothing and Smearing
To smooth out some of the skin areas (Figure 4) I used Acrylics > Captured
Bristle with a reduced Resat setting (from 60 to about 15 percent). This gently
blends the current color whilst smearing the underlying brush strokes.
Dodge
and Burn Final Touch
My final touch, besides my digital signature, was a little Photo > Dodge
and Burn to bring out tonal contrast in the key focal areas of the image.
Other
Examples
I have included a small before and after gallery of other images I have painted
using Painter IX. These images are “Melting” (Figures 5 and 6,
based on my photo of professional Tango dancers Chelsea Eng and Moti Buchboot), “Circle
of Love” (Figures 7 and 8, based on my photo of Marti, Larry and Ryland), “Cool
Bass” (Figures 9 and 10, based on my photo of bassist Marcus Shelby),
and “Blow That Sax!” (Figures 11 and 12, based on my photo of saxophonist
Jeff Ervin). “Melting” and “Blow That Sax!” both use
the new Artist’s Oils. You can see more examples of my Painter artworks
at www.jeremysutton.com/.
Actions Steps
1. Purchase, upgrade to, or download the free trial version of Corel Painter
IX.
2. Purchase a Wacom tablet, if you don’t already have one.
3. Open up one of your images in Painter, make a clone copy of it (File > Clone
or Quick Clone), and start playing!
4. When you’re ready for more instructional information seek out books,
DVDs, CDs, classes, seminars, etc. (Besides offering my own books, DVDs and
classes, I also have articles, tutorials and links to many other Painter resources
and teachers on my web site www.paintercreativity.com/.)
Jeremy Sutton is a
portrait artist, author and educator based in San Francisco, known for his
lively presentations and engaging teaching style as well as his
in-depth knowledge of Painter. Jeremy will be coming out with his new four-DVD
tutorial set: Painter IX Simplified for Photographers, and his new book, Painter
IX Creativity: Digital Artist’s Handbook, in the next few months. Join
his email list at www.paintercreativity.com to be kept posted.
Print this Page - Close this Page
|