

It takes awhile for this to take effect and quite a bit of drawing over strokes to achieve this however, and that INCLUDES using a mouse. It begins to erase the colour on that layer and match it with the one(s) below. While this tool is mainly for blending and blurring, the blur tool has a bit of an eraser effect. Now, here’s WHY it’s second only to the Water tool. Those that don’t have a tablet, you can easily use this tool for blending and blurring, since that’s it’s only purpose. I’ll go into why here, because if you can’t use the water tool, then I’d suggest that you use this tool, as this one is the next best for it. Though, if you recall, in some previous posts, I recommended the Water tool over all the other tools in the program that can blend. So, that said, it’s good for effectively blurring and blending colours to get rid of sharp cut-offs if and when you don’t need them, the only effect pressure sensitivity has on this brush is stroke size, which in this case is how far the blending effect extends outward. Anyway, so yeah, this is the primary tool for that, and that’s literally all it does. It’s the only tool in SAI physically DESIGNED to blur and blend and nothing else (as I swear I’ve gotten colour out of the Water 9 and Water 10 tools, so I swear they’re not just for blending and blurring).

As you can see, it’s SAI’s primary blending and blurring tool. There…really isn’t much to this tool at all, but here’s an example of it at work:Īlright, that’s the blur tool essentially. Alright, today it’s the last of SAI’s default brushes.
