Hope that helps some of you out that would like to return to this guide later or print it out! Photoshop also allows users to create their own custom patterns, something I find valuable because I like my work to be distinctively different from everyone else’s and textures, papers and patterns are one of my “secret tricks” I keep in my creative toolbox.Īs with all my posts, this one is available for download as a PDF by clicking here. ![]() More from our Popular Tools in Photoshop series: The Preset Manager allows you to delete Patterns you don’t like, drag and drop individual Patterns to organize them to your liking, save your own set of Pattern presets, export them to destinations outside of Photoshop, share them with others or load their custom collections into your Photoshop. In addition, the Preset Manager for Pattern can also be accessed from this fly out menu (or by choosing Edit / Presets / Preset Manager from the Main Menu Bar – it opens to show the Brushes, but you can choose Patterns from the drop down menu there). Not all of the patterns are in the active library, but it’s easy to choose them from the fly out menu just by clicking on the collections you want to use. Photoshop comes with a library of Pattern Presets. Patterns are used to create decorative papers and to apply overall or specific area texture.Īpplied to Layers, users can distort, stack up and take advantage of Blending Modes to further expand the range of visual results possible. ![]() ![]() ![]() Patterns can be brushed on using the Pattern Stamp Tool, used to fill selected areas with the Paint Bucket Tool, used as an overall fill (Edit / Fill / Pattern) or applied as part of a Layer Style (Pattern Overlay). Photoshop offers a variety of ways of working with and using Patterns.
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