Pixel art dithering techniques explained with examples
The question of when to apply texture overlays to digital paintings and how is one of those craft details that matters more than it gets discussed.
A texture overlay should add physical quality without competing with the painting's own texture. The danger zone is 15%+ opacity on a high-detail texture — above that it reads as a layer on top of the painting rather than a quality of the painting's surface.
I use two kinds of textures: paper grain (for a traditional media quality) and canvas weave (for a painting quality). They suit different work. Paper grain works with linework-based illustration. Canvas weave works with painterly work.
Application method matters. I multiply the texture overlay at around 8% opacity over the full painting, then add a second overlay in soft light mode at 5% for luminosity variation. Two subtle layers combine without overwhelming. A single layer at 13% looks more obviously applied.
One important note: apply texture as the final step after color adjustments are done. Texture under a curves adjustment layer starts to look unnatural.
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts.