For inspiration, expert tips, and solutions to common issues, visit the Adobe Fresco Community forum. Connect with our team and fellow users to exchange ideas, share your creations, stay updated with the latest features and announcements, and provide feedback.
- Adobe Fresco User Guide
- Introduction
- What's New in Adobe Fresco
- What is Adobe Fresco
- System Requirements for Adobe Fresco
- Release Notes for Adobe Fresco
- Adobe Fresco on the iPhone
- Keyboard shortcuts
- Accessibility in Fresco
- Adobe Fresco | Common questions
- Get started with the user interface
- Upgrade to a premium plan to access premium fonts
- Storage for Adobe Fresco
- Supported features on iPad and Windows devices
- Draw, paint, animate, and share
- Layers
- Shapes in Adobe Fresco
- Pixel brushes
- Live brushes
- Vector brushes
- Mixer brushes
- Ribbon brushes
- Adjust pressure curve on stylus
- Colors
- Paint inside boundaries
- Apply motion to artwork
- Free Transform tool
- Magic Wand tool
- Smudge tool
- Liquify tool
- Add and modify text
- Publish, export, and share
- Layer masks
- Access Creative Cloud libraries in Fresco
- Ruler
- Erasers
- Add your own font
- Grids alignment
- Symmetry
- Adobe Fresco and Creative Cloud apps
- Cloud documents
- Troubleshooting
- Examples, ideas, and inspiration
Learn how to create realistic watercolor and oil paintings with live brushes in Adobe Fresco.
An artwork created with live brushes looks like a real-life painting; the watercolor stays wet, the oil paint looks thick and creamy.
When you paint with a watercolor live brush, you can see the color bloom into adjacent areas of the canvas. With an oil live brush, you can create varied swirls of color by mixing oil colors. Live brushes are pixel-based and powered by Adobe Sensei.
You cannot preview brush flow or brush size when you are working with live brushes in Fresco 1.1 on Windows. For more information, see Supported features on Windows and iOS.
Video tutorials: How to paint with live brushes
If you are using Adobe Fresco live brushes for the first time, watch these videos to become familiar with the user interface:
Types of live brushes
Brushes with watercolor paper texture that bloom and spread
Round Detail - Paint in various stroke widths from super-thin to bold and to fill in with paint.
Wash Soft - Make lighter shades on a canvas with a soft washed out look.
Wash Flat - Cover large areas quickly with a washed-out watercolor look. (Barrel roll enabled)
Wet Spatter - Paint backgrounds for artwork with drops of color.
Oil live brushes
Brushes with the texture and thickness of real oil paints
Flat - Make bold strokes and cover large areas quickly. Blend two areas with a smooth transition and use the edge for thin lines.
Round - Make calligraphic painting. Use variant pressure to create different thicknesses of strokes.
Filbert - Cover large areas that include some finer brushes. Use it to create a fine blend with the round edges of the brush.
Detail - Make finer detailing in smaller areas effectively.
Glaze - Create a unique stained-glass effect with fluidity.
Chunky - Get started easily and use dry brush techniques.
Short - Make lettering with stylish strokes.
Navigate to Brush settings > Shape dynamics > Angle Control > Roll to enable the new Apple Pencil Pro's barrel roll for Watercolor wash flat roll brush. Squeeze the barrel for quick access to recently used brushes, colors, brush size, and undo/redo options.
Try these steps to create the artwork shown here with watercolor live brushes.
- In a new document, use the Fill tool to give a flat fill to the background.
- Add a new layer and create a basic shape of an orange using the Lasso selection tool.
- Double-tap the Live Brushes icon and choose the Watercolor Wash Flat brush and paint the selected area.
- Tune the brush settings to get a smaller size, less water flow, and 100% color flow. Add more details to the leaf and the stem.
- Use the Brush selection tool to add other details like the freckles on the orange.
Fresco does not support Watercolor brushes on Surface Pro X and Surface Pro 9 devices. For more information, see Supported features on iPad, iPhone, and Windows.
How to use oil live brushes
Try these steps to create the artwork shown here with oil live brushes.
- In a new document, double-tap the Pixel Brushes
icon and choose the Pencil brush from Sketching and draw an owl. - Add a new layer, choose a color for the background, and fill the layer with the Fill tool.
- Add another layer. Double-tap the Live Brushes
icon and choose Oilpaint Glaze Brush and start painting the owl. - Choose Oilpaint Round Brush (small size) while working on the eyes. Choose Oilpaint Filbert Brush to add a variety of color strokes.
- Work from dark tones to light tones to make the artwork richer.
- To remove the canvas texture, open the Oil Brush Settings control and change Canvas Texture to None.
More like this
We've got you started with live brushes in Adobe Fresco. Take a step forward and learn how to unleash your creativity with pixel brushes, vector brushes, colors, and more.
Join our community to connect, learn, and engage