Five Years of Fresco
Five Years of Adobe Fresco
One of the fun things about being an Adobe Community Expert are the various challenges available, there is a November Challenge to illustrate Five years of Adobe Fresco.
I thought back to 2019 and launch year and our family road trip around California, playing with some texture brushes for a change as I usually work entirely with vector brushes so I can scale the output to any size and edit after sending to Illustrator on desktop and fixing excess points with Vector First Aid by Astute Graphics.
Fresco is a versatile digital painting and drawing app for tablets designed for artists of all skill levels, it is my most used app on the iPad Pro.
It offers a wide range of brushes, including:
Live Brushes: These mimic real-life watercolours and oils, allowing them to blend and smudge naturally.
Pixel Brushes: These include a variety of Photoshop brushes that replicate mediums like charcoal and pastel.
Vector Brushes: These create crisp, scalable lines perfect for detailed designs
Layer control, animation and timelapse output are all built-in, and works excellently with the Apple Pencil and even better with a Paperlike screen protector.
You can check it out at Adobe.com
I thought back to 2019 and launch year and our family road trip around California, playing with some texture brushes for a change as I usually work entirely with vector brushes so I can scale the output to any size and edit after sending to Illustrator on desktop and fixing excess points with Vector First Aid by Astute Graphics.
Fresco is a versatile digital painting and drawing app for tablets designed for artists of all skill levels, it is my most used app on the iPad Pro.
It offers a wide range of brushes, including:
Live Brushes: These mimic real-life watercolours and oils, allowing them to blend and smudge naturally.
Pixel Brushes: These include a variety of Photoshop brushes that replicate mediums like charcoal and pastel.
Vector Brushes: These create crisp, scalable lines perfect for detailed designs
Layer control, animation and timelapse output are all built-in, and works excellently with the Apple Pencil and even better with a Paperlike screen protector.
You can check it out at Adobe.com