Image Hoses and Nozzles
Metacreation’s Painter 5 is a unique artist’s tool that duplicates many of the features of an artist’s studio, and conjures up tools that artists could only dream of. Or, that only artists could dream of.
One of these tools is the image hose.
The image hose lets you “spray” discrete images onto your canvas. These “hoses”
are fun and addictive to make.
In a nutshell, the image hose file is a specially created file containing a group of two or more floaters.
| 1. Create an image file with the images as floaters in it. |
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Creating the Stone
click in my new image, and drag to select,
and choose
- a little chalk If you don't have Kai's Power Tools, use -Bingo. Nauseatingly easy, isn’t it? Now, make some variations. Select your floater, (click
on the floater in the floater list,) copy
your floater, and paste it. Now, vary it, paste another, vary it, etc. until you have a nice selection. Here I used the F/X brushes, with the fire, glow variations. (I decided that I wasn't happy with the blue/yellow combination). At this point, you could also resize or rotate the floaters for added variety in the final hose. Your light source should be reasonably consistent. If you rotate the
floaters into positions where the highlights are no longer consistent,
use |
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And, unless you have the drop shadow effect memorized, you are going to need to see what you are doing. Copy one floater and create a new document with a white background. Paste
your floater, then experiment with the drop shadow. When you are satisfied with the effect, go back to your original document. Add a drop shadow to all the floaters in turn (the values that you used will stick until you change them again, or you restart Painter). Check the collapse to one layer box if you have no further editing to do. |
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| 2. Group the floaters and create the file. Save and name file. |
- Select all of the floaters, either by holding down Shift, and click on each one in turn in the floater list, or by selecting the floater pull down menu on the Objects palette, and choosing select all. Now, group your floaters by clicking on the group button in the Objects palette.
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This is your image hose!!! That's it. You did it.
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| 3. Load the nozzle file and then add to the library |
- To actually hose with this file, you will need to load it. Select the nozzle pulldown (remember where it is by now? Both the Nozzles palette and the Brushes palette.) Select Load Nozzle. - Navigate, if necessary, to where you saved the file. Select it and click on the open button. Ta-da. Nothing has apparently happened. - That's ok. The image is loaded as a hose anyway. Now, you can select the Image Hose brush and hose with it right now, or you can add it to your nozzle library so that you can modify the settings with the sliders in the nozzle palette, and so that it is ready to go next time. Important note: if you don't add the nozzle to the nozzle library, you will have to reload it every time you want to use it. |
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- And there it is, a permanent part of the nozzle library. (Well, not completely permanent. You can remove it, but let's not worry about that now.)
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So, now you know everything you need to know about making a single-rank nozzle. Some cool ideas for hoses: flowers, fruit, vegetables, moths, butterflies and other insects, shrubbery, coins, stones, pebbles, seashells, nuts n bolts, nails and screws, bricks, alien artifacts, body parts. Go crazy. Have fun. Show me your samples. |
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Things to try: Change the opacity of the nozzle. Use the controls palette. Adjust the size of the individual hosed images with the scale slider, and try the rank 1 slider to adjust the order, (or the variable that controls the order,) that the images are laid down. (This is a single-rank hose, so rank 2 and 3 sliders do not do anything.
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