Once you’ve installed it, you’ll see it in your Brush Library: Check these instruction on our support site if you need help getting any brushes into the app.
If you’re married to an older version of SketchBook, you can install brushes directly inside the app. The entire brush set will automatically install. If you’re a SketchBook Pro user and are using the most recent version of SketchBook (version 8), you can simply download the CAW Set and double click this.
To kick things off, we’ve got a free brush set from Calum Alexander Watt, a storyboarder, concept artist, and illustrator who makes amazing character art like this: Some of these free brushes have been created by us as we’ve expanded our own personal brush library, but some of them will be from talented professional artists we admire. To help encourage our users to get the most out of our app, we’re going to start sharing a new brush set every week right here on our blog. (Or maybe your brush sets are so damn good that you’d like to sell them - see the end of this post).
Maybe you want to share a brush set you’ve created with a friend, or maybe you downloaded a cool brush set you found online. You can extensively tweak brushes and create brush sets that are highly tailored to the way you work, but some people who use SketchBook don’t know how easy it is to import and export custom brush sets.