Which of the following modifier of the brush tool allow you to paint the blank area of stage leaving line and fills unaffected
Answers
Answer:
Brush Tool is used to paint with brushlike strokes and to fill enclosed areas. Unlike the Pencil Tool, which creates a single, solid line, the Brush Tool creates filled shapes with outlines of zero thickness. (This is easily demonstrated by painting a stroke with the Brush, then choosing a new color for the Ink Bottle, and then clicking that brushed line with the Ink Bottle. The Brush line of zero thickness will acquire the line thickness and color from the Ink Bottle if there were no line, the Ink Bottle would be unable to alter the stroke in this manner.) The fills can be solid colors, gradients, or fills derived from bitmaps. Additionally, the Brush Tool options permit you to paint in unusual ways: You can choose to paint in front of or behind an element, or you can apply paint only within a specific filled area, or within a selection. The Brush Mode option drop-down reveals five painting modes that are amazingly useful for a wide range of effects when applying brush strokes: Paint Normal, Paint Fills, Paint Behind, Paint Selection, and Paint Inside, as shown below.
The Brush Tool and options (left); the Brush Mode drop-down (right)
The Brush Tool and options (left); the Brush Mode drop-down (right)
Depending on whether you have a pressure-sensitive tablet connected to your computer, four or five options appear in the Options Tray when the Brush Tool is active.
The Use Pressure option which only appears if you have a pressure-sensitive tablet attached to your computer and the Brush Mode are both unique to the Brush Tool. The Lock Fill option is common to both the Brush Tool and the Paint Bucket. Although similar to Stroke Weight and Line Style, the Brush Size and Brush Shape drop-downs are also fairly unique to the Brush Tool. In the following sections, we run through all of the Brush options just to make certain that we’re clear on all points, even if there is some review.
To choose or change the Brush Color, either click the Fill Color button on the Toolbox, or use the Fill Panel. Because the Brush Tool creates filled shapes with outlines of zero thickness, the Stroke Color button is defunct when the Brush Tool is active.
Using the Brush Mode option
The Brush Mode option is a drop-down menu with five modes for applying brush strokes: Paint Normal, Paint Fills, Paint Behind, Paint Selection, and Paint Inside.
Used in conjunction with selections, the Brush Modes option yields a broad range of sophisticated paint masking capabilities.The following images depict various ways in which the Brush Modes interact with drawn and painted elements. The base image is a solid gray rounded rectangle drawn with a black, hatched outline. Three white lines of various widths are drawn on top of the gray fill of the rectangle.
Paint Normal Mode
Paint Normal Mode, shown below, applies brush strokes over the top of any lines or fills.
In Paint Normal Mode, a black scrawl covers all elements: background, outline, fill, and drawn lines.
In Paint Normal Mode, a black scrawl covers all elements: background, outline, fill, and drawn lines.
Paint Fills Mode
Paint Fills Mode, shown below, applies brush strokes to replace any fills, but leaves lines untouched.
In Paint Fills Mode, a black scrawl covers both the gray fill and the background which, surprisingly, is considered a fill in this case.
Paint Fills Mode, a black scrawl covers both the gray fill and the background
Paint Behind Mode
Paint Behind Mode applies brush strokes only to blank areas and leaves all fills, lines or other items untouched. As shown below, the only parts of the stroke that cover are those over the background. Effectively, the scrawl has gone behind the entire shape. If the stroke had originated within the gray fill, it would have covered the fill and gone behind the drawn white lines.
Scrawling again in Paint Behind Mode, the only parts of the stroke that cover are those over the background.
Scrawling again in Paint Behind Mode, the only parts of the stroke that cover are those over the background.
Paint Selection Mode
Paint Selection Mode applies brush strokes only to selected fills. Below, a selection was made by shift-clicking both the gray fill and the upper white line. The same black scrawl has been drawn with the selection described in the above still active, using Paint Selection Mode.
Only the selected gray fill has been covered by the brush stroke.
Only the selected gray fill has been covered by the brush stroke
Paint Inside Mode
Answer:
The Brush Tool is used to paint with brushlike strokes and to fill enclosed areas. Unlike the Pencil Tool, which creates a single, solid line, the Brush Tool creates filled shapes with outlines of zero thickness. (This is easily demonstrated by painting a stroke with the Brush, then choosing a new color for the Ink Bottle, and then clicking that brushed line with the Ink Bottle. The Brush line of zero thickness will acquire the line thickness and color from the Ink Bottle if there were no line, the Ink Bottle would be unable to alter the stroke in this manner.) The fills can be solid colors, gradients, or fills derived from bitmaps. Additionally, the Brush Tool options permit you to paint in unusual ways: You can choose to paint in front of or behind an element, or you can apply paint only within a specific filled area, or within a selection. The Brush Mode option drop-down reveals five painting modes that are amazingly useful for a wide range of effects when applying brush strokes: Paint Normal, Paint Fills, Paint Behind, Paint Selection, and Paint Inside, as shown below.
Explanation: