If this still doesn't offer enough dexterity to satisfy your artistic longings, you can experiment by creating your own brushes and pens. The feature makes use of a digital tablet all but a prerequisite.
Also new is support for tablet tilt, which adjusts the width of a brush stroke or pencil line depending on the angle at which you hold the pen. Conversely, the velocity control will put down more ink with slower strokes. So now, when you select the digital versions of these instruments, faster strokes produce thinner lines. In this version, Corel has expanded the RealBristle tool to encompass hard or dry tools, including chalks, colored pencils, pastels, and even Conté crayons. Loaded brushes laid down a thicker, more saturated streak. Faster strokes were thinner, for example, while slower strokes with more pressure splayed out the brush so that more marks from individual strands appeared. With that information, the driving algorithm could map the path of each individual bristle. It recreated the sensation and the artistic effect of working with physical brushes by recognizing the pressure applied on the stylus and the speed at which it moved when a user executed a stroke. The primary feature of Painter X, for example, was the astoundingly realistic RealBristle tool. What's more the refinements and increased flexibility will draw current users into upgrading. Anyone with a working knowledge of the previous version will be able to step into Painter 11 with ease.
#Corel painter 11 windows
The thirty new Real Hard Media tools in Painter 11 give the venerable natural-media paint program for Windows and OS X its most uncanny re-creations yet of pencils, pens, pastels, chalk, and other classic drawing tools.
Corel Painter may owe its name to oils and watercolors, but in version 11, art media and implements other than paint and brushes enjoy the spotlight.