OK, I admit that I am a geek and have watched Bob Ross's Joy of Painting on PBS ever since I was a tiny little kid. (Surely you know the guy who I am talking about, big afro? Happy Trees? link:
http://www.bobross.com/)
If you visit that link, the mountains in the image behind him are done by putting in the form of the mountain in a dark basecoat, then skimming in one stroke with white over the top with a his pallett knife. Does anyone have any idea on how I can replicate that stroke? I have tried just about all the default brushes, and altered a lot of them in re: to spacing and jitter, etc but I am just not getting "IT"
Also, my second question is in re: to Donna Dewberry's "One Stroke" painting technique. I am fairly good at doing this with a real brush and paint. In fact, it is really the only "real life" painting technique I am any good at. If I could translate this to photoshop somehow, I think I'd be pretty happy!
Link to sample images:
http://www.onestroke.com/demo/pages/RTGs/RTGMoreInfo/1169MoreInfo.html
That would mean being able to stroke the foreground and background colors at the same time. Like a gradient fill, only in a gradient brush... Is this possible? In real life, you side load two or three colors onto a brush to get the ripple effect in the petals.
I am thinking that I may need to select an area, gradient fill it, then smudge tool it to get the effect I want, but it would be so much simpler if I can just gradient brush. KWIM?
I would appreciate anyone's input on either of these two techniques. I'll keep pluggin' away at the problem in the meantime!
Thanks in advance!!
Delia