Tutorial: How to Use Photoshop Brushes in Corel Painter
September 1st, 2009 | Published in Corel Painter, Featured, Tutorials | 12 Comments

A quick painting with a custom-made Captured Grass variant, based on a brush from Photoshop. You can vary the color, size, and opacity, just as with any brush in Painter. Image brushes like this can save you lots of time.
As you probably know, Photoshop brushes don’t work in Painter, and vice versa. But it’s quite possible to “convert” your favorite Photoshop brushes and bring them into Corel Painter. Painter’s Captured dab uses a greyscale bitmap image, just like the brushes in Photoshop. To convert them, just create an image of the brush tip in Photoshop, save the file, open it in Painter, and “capture the dab.” It’s really pretty easy, so let’s get to it.
First, create a new file in Photoshop, about 6 inches square at 300dpi, with a white background. Choose the Brush tool (select the brush icon, or press B). Open the brush selection list and find a brush you’d like to bring into Painter. I’ve got a brush shaped like blades of grass, so I’ll pick that one.

One click of the mouse in Photoshop produces this greyscale image, using a custom grass brush found on the internet.
With opacity and flow both set to 100, click the mouse once in the middle of the image. This gives you one copy of the brush “tip”. Now save this file (either JPG or PSD will work fine), and close it. Open this same file now in Painter.
(The following steps come from Mr. John Derry, one of the original creators of Painter. You can read his detailed instructions here if you need more information. Thanks, John!)
Step One: Copy a variant
Before you make changes to a variant, copy it and make your changes to that copy. This way you won’t overwrite the default brushes (or one of your own, for that matter). To do this, click on the little triangle next to the brush selector (as shown below), and you’ll get a flyout menu. Choose “Save variant…” For our example, I’ll be copying the Captured Bristle variant of the Acrylics. When I click on “Save variant…”, a save dialogue appears, with the name filled in for me as “Captured Bristle.” If you’re updating an existing brush, you’d accept the name, but in our case we’re creating a new version. So I’ll type in “Captured Grass”. When I click “OK”, a new variation named “Captured Grass” is added to the Acrylics category. To see it, click on the brush selector drop-down, and there it is. Select it. 
Step Two: Capture the dab
At this point, you have your Photoshop brush image open in Painter, and your brand-new Captured Grass variant is selected. Time to capture the dab! This can be a little tricky, so follow along carefully. Type R (or choose the rectangular selection icon). Click on your mouse and begin to draw the selection outwards from the upper left corner. While drawing the selection, depress the Shift key. This constrains the selection to a perfect square. (Warning: do not press the Shift key first, or Capture Dab will be grayed out in the next step.)
With this square selection active, click the brush selector triangle again. This time, choose “Capture Dab” from the flyout menu. (If it is grayed out, try your selection again, making sure not to press Shift until you are making the selection.) Nothing seems to happen, but it did capture the dab. Now let’s adjust our new variant.
Step Three: Adjust
Open the Brush Creator (go Window > Show Brush Creator, or type CMD/CTL+B). Click on the Size tab, and you’ll see your brush shape in the preview window. If you see a black circle, instead, click on the preview window. This will toggle the brush preview. Here’s what you should see:
Click in the practice area to see how your new variant works. We’ll make some adjustments so that each image is separate, like in Photoshop. In this case, we don’t want the images to repeat one on top of another, like a normal Painter brush. We want it to act more like the Image Hose. So click on the Spacing tab. Move the sliders for “Spacing” and “Minimum Spacing” all the way to the right, so there’s no overlapping. There are other adjustments you can make, as laid out in John’s article, above. But for now, we’re all set. Go ahead and exit the Brush Creator. Notice that there is no save button on the Brush Creator. Whatever changes you make are automatically saved upon exit. This is why I had you work on a copy right from the start.
Related Posts
- Using the Brush Transposer in Corel Painter to Create Custom Brushes
- Tutorial: Custom Brushes in Corel Painter, Part One
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- Tutorial: Basic Portrait Painting Technique for Corel Painter
- Tutorial: Use Corel Painter’s Papers for Texture
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September 2nd, 2009 at 6:35 pm (#)
[...] Here is the original post: Tutorial: How to Use Photoshop Brushes in Corel Painter :: Digital … [...]
September 14th, 2009 at 5:59 am (#)
thank you!!!
September 14th, 2009 at 6:00 am (#)
thank you…I wondered how one could change them..
THANKS!
September 14th, 2009 at 4:47 pm (#)
You’re welcome! Thanks for stopping by!
February 9th, 2010 at 8:32 pm (#)
That’s cool – but I would be interested in converting the other way around (Painter > PS)… Do you know if that’s possible as well?
February 11th, 2010 at 11:39 am (#)
Chid –
Painter brushes are quite different from Photoshop’s. The “dab” is a static image used in the “captured” variants in Painter, and that’s the only place the two are similar. You could copy dabs from Painter to Photoshop, I suppose, but that’s about it.
Bob
February 20th, 2010 at 1:02 pm (#)
Thanks been looking for a way to do this I’m also looking to convert brushes from older versions of painter to newer versions haven’t had any luck find this info though.
June 7th, 2010 at 9:56 am (#)
hello
i have go a problem with captured brushes in painter x (mac)
when i create captured brushes like you explain here, it works
but when i start painter x the day after it leave at startup, and when i start again and again it does’nt open
it work again only when i restoring the workspace to the original settings but i loose all the captured and custom burshes
could you help me?
(sorry for my english i’m french)
thanks
June 7th, 2010 at 7:32 pm (#)
Hi Doris –
I’m not sure why this is happening for you. If you follow the steps, you are copying an existing brush and saving it with a new name. You are simply adding a new brush to a brush category, which should not affect how Painter starts up.
Try this: just do Step One, and then close Painter. See if it starts now. If you have a problem with that, there may be something else going on. Hard to solve from across the ocean!
Let me know if that helps –
Bob
July 28th, 2010 at 5:03 pm (#)
I tried the process for 2 hours and no luck. The corel painter11 program would close and crash as soon as I would click for the brush creator. I thought well i will have to uninstall my program and install. So I did . Well the same problem?? I just cannot get anywhere. I have windows vista , plenty of ram and hard drive. I use photoshop cs3
July 28th, 2010 at 5:06 pm (#)
Back again , I also changed the file to be made into a brush from the example noted here to a 72 dpi instead and no luck.
July 28th, 2010 at 5:09 pm (#)
Theresa –
Wish I knew what to tell you, other than to downgrade back to Painter X, which doesn’t have this problem. I have yet to upgrade to 11. I probably won’t, due to stories like yours and many others. Sorry!
-Bob