Your solution is quite interesting for erasing quickly big chunks of drawing. If there is already a way to make that happen ill be happy to know-how! So that the right-click command will be more useful while using a very thin brush line. I do have a fantasy though, that one day it will be possible to have different brush sizes to drawing mode vs erase mode The solution I use to erase is to set the E keystroke to "filled stroke" and then I select big areas with it to erase You can also set the second side switch to an Eraser instead. So this way you do keep always 2 dedicated pen tips for each tool. I can also increase/decrease size while keeping the eraser tip down, so it doesn't affect my drawing brush in any way. Well, for me it is absolutely enough - I usually set the eraser tip to a big soft eraser with pressure, so I can erase in various sizes, which are quite enough. Although it has a little problem: if you modify your current tool a little bit (for example change size) it will register it as new tool, and will switch back only to the same tool before modification, so keep that in mind.ģ. I have a dedicated keyboard shortcut for it, so I can go back to the previous tool anytime. Yes you can - there is a command called "Get Previous Tool" - search it in the shortcuts. So I am not sure if you are talking about this or not, but you don't need another right click - just one.Ģ. But on Windows there is a slight problem with that - the on screen controls don't work very well with TVPaint. I use the other Wacom pen switch for the onscreen controls, which is super useful, as I can add more functions there. TVPaint is built that way - one button for all. Windows or not it doesn't matter - if you set your Pen side button to right click in TVPaint, you will have both eraser and right click menu - you don't need another button. that is qucik and pressing B will get you back to the last used brush.ġ. I sometimes use the lasso-tool to erase a bigger area. Sometimes you just want to erase light and sometimes every line. Maybe it could be good to update the eraser a bit, being able to set a custom brush as default eraser. It's just to find a good way to draw and erase and to avoid to many clicks in the process. I also have a custom palette where I collect all my tools, easy to select hem.- super useful. Yes, I use that sometimes but it would be good if you could specify in TVpaint you main eraser. Yes I can but then I cant get back to the last used tool without pressing a new button.ģ. I am familiar with all the methods abd I nbow understand it it difficult to set an eraser like in many other software.ġ, Since I am on Windows I nedd my right-click to show the meny in the software so I will set it to the other button on the stylus pen.Ģ. I don't use the keyboard at all - all I need I have in the Pen and on the Express keys of my Wacom Cintiq I always have all my brushes in the side panel so I can quickly access them without using shortcuts. In my workflow I use the right-click Erase most time, and if I need to erase faster bigger areas, I flip my pen and use the Eraser tip. So each time you flip your pen you will have this eraser. For that you need of course a pen with this function, like Wacom pen, and then you click with it an Eraser you want, and it will be remembered until you click something else with it. You can also use your stylus pen Eraser end (the other end of the stylus) to Erase. Just search for the name of the eraser tool you want, and assign a shortcut to it.ģ. If you want a different Eraser, then you have to create a dedicated Eraser tool action (several of those are already preset by default in the Sketch Panels) and assign a shortcut to it in the Shortcuts Prefs (Edit>Shortcuts.). You can of course use F4 for switching to the same Erase mode, but you then will have to press F2 to go back to Color mode. This is the fastest and the most organic way to use any brush as eraser. Releasing the right-click will turn it back into the previous mode. If you are using any brush or tool, pressing the RIGHT-CLICK (on a stylus pen it's usually the side switch) will switch this same brush to Eraser mode as long as it's pressed. There is not really a dedicated Eraser tool, as in other software, but rather it's just a function of any drawing tool.ġ. This is super easy as TVPaint is very flexible and can be achieved in several ways depending on the result you want.
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