Since we've wandered off into the Weeds of Theory, I thought I'd toss out a few thoughts on homogenizing various real media tools. Maybe I'm way off base, maybe Krita can never do this, maybe this is 3.0 material, whatever. I'm just throwing it out as 'stuff to think about'. The way I see it, you draw/paint with two types of material... brushes, and sponges. Both have properties such as density (both size and frequency) and stiffness. For brushes, this should be fairly intuitive; density means number and size of the bristles. For sponges, density means how big the holes are, and how much of the 'painting surface' is holes vs. empty space. Pressure on a sponge usually increases the frequency-density. This seems to cover most types of drawing implements. I know, you are screaming "what about pens, pencils, chalk, etc?". Well... A pencil is a very tiny chalk which is a sponge, usually with very high frequency density and maximum stiffness. A pen is probably a fully-dense sponge with moderate stiffness, although a one-bristle brush might work better for some types of pen (e.g. a quill?). (Ok... this covers *contact* tools. Airbrushes are of course totally different. Also, a 'squirt' tool comes to mind...) The rest is pretty much covered in the paint type, the main characteristics of which is wetness/dryness. A "wet" paint (watercolor, for example) will run much more and be more easily manipulated with water, while a dry paint (which would also be carbon, chalk, etc.) won't run at all. Application is then affected primarily by two characteristics; paint wetness/dryness, and brush stiffness. A dry paint will tend to stay put, while a wet paint will settle into valleys, and a medium paint will tend to give more even coverage. A stiff brush will tend to deposit paint mainly on peaks, while a flexible brush will provide more even coverage. -- Matthew If you can read this, you're too close. _______________________________________________ kimageshop mailing list kimageshop@kde.org https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kimageshop