07-12-2022, 01:26 AM
(07-11-2022, 05:48 AM)PixLab Wrote:Oh thanks, that worked for me, I didn't know that there were 2 different pixel brushes lol(07-11-2022, 02:58 AM)AlphaNumericWHaT Wrote:(07-10-2022, 04:32 PM)PixLab Wrote: use the rectangle select tool (no feather, no round corner, nothing BUT just the anti-aliasing selected), make a square of 2 pixels, fill with your favorite color, then do a [Ctrl+C] or go to menu Edit > Copy (this will put that 2pixels image in the Clipboard), now you can do Select ➤ NoneIt's a bit inefficient though.. are there any other ways to do it? (like actually using the pencil tool for different sizes) Anyways thanks for telling me!
Then select the pencil and in the Tool Options, click to select a brush and go up in the brushes' dropdown menu and select the very first brush at the top called Clipboard image (this brush is so little that you might see only a white square, just click on it)
Now you have your 2 pixels brush
Um... May be it's too easy ➤ Just go to the Tool Options and change the size like any other brushes
(07-11-2022, 02:58 AM)AlphaNumericWHaT Wrote: How do I import the brush into Gimp?
You don't need... If you have read the comment properly, you would have seen that @programmer_ceds, @krikor, @rich2005 and I did spoke about it...
You and all of us already have the brush you're interested in, installed with GIMP by default. It's called "Pixel" (IT IS NOT the one called "1.Pixel")
An image is better than thousands words, screenshot below