Our Seamless Floral Pattern Brushes for Procreate include 100 brushes, in 4 separate brushsets. These brushes are original designs for you to use in your own work, inspired by the textile work of William Morris. These brushes have high resolution textures that can be scaled very large, or very small and they will seamlessly repeat. The brushes have a natural weathered edge and are pressure-sensitive, so you can control exactly how much color goes down and where.
With 100 unique patterns to play with, the possible combinations are seemingly endless! You can also use these patterns to mask layers, or you can liquify and contort the patterns you put down. You can even "invert" the pattern if you're careful: find "grain > edit grain source" in the brush settings, and tap with two fingers to invert the pattern. Remember, you can always reset the brush to the original settings.
I find its fun to use the patterns with striking bold colors in combinations of 2 or 3. I also like to use "bold" patterns with "accent" patterns, so there is a contrast in weight.
The brushes:
All 100 of the pattern brushes are spread across 4 brush set files, each set is around 200MB (so make sure you're on a good internet connection.)
The behavior of these brushes is very uniform - You can use the scale slider to scale the texture larger or smaller, but it also depends on how "zoomed in" you are to the canvas, so keep that in mind. I love the organic speckled texture on the edges of the pattern, but you can also use a mask to get any kind of edge you want.
Procreate 5 is here, and its amazing! You can now install a LOT of brushes at once using the new Files app in iOS 11. We recommend backing up your purchase using an iCloud account (its free), or syncing them to Files with iTunes.
First things first... USE SAFARI on iPad!
Also make sure you open the link in the full Safari app (it must be Safari, no other browser will work), as the side-loaded one that gmail/other email apps use won’t work.
Note: Brush files end in *.brushset
Once you click the file name/download button, a blue arrow in a circle should appear in the top right corner of Safari. This is the "downloads" area. Tap this icon and you should see your download appear in a list like so:
Simply tap the file and it should automatically open in Procreate. Depending on if you've performed this before, it may ask you what you want to do with the file after tapping it, in which case you would simply find the Procreate icon and send it there.