True Grit Texture Supply - Infinite Pulp For Pr... ~repack~
: All versions include comprehensive video tutorials to guide you through manual duplication and canvas extension specific to Procreate's workflow. Go to product viewer dialog for this item. True Grit Texture Supply Infinite Pulp Bundle
While the core high-resolution assets are identical across applications, the user experience varies depending on your software and hardware setup. 1. Procreate on iPad Infinite Pulp 01 - True Grit Texture Supply
Each texture is scanned from real materials, ensuring authentic grit, pulp fibers, and imperfections.
Most commercial texture packs provide basic JPEG or PNG overlays that users drop over their art using simple layer blend modes like Multiply or Overlay. Infinite Pulp uses a non-destructive, multi-layer design. Instead of a single image, each of the contains isolated highlight and shadow layers. True Grit Texture Supply - Infinite Pulp for Pr...
Here is the story and breakdown of the product:
: Provides the foundational organic tone (such as vintage comic newsprint, heavy cardstock, or recycled fiber).
Helps preview how digital designs will look when screen-printed onto physical stocks. : All versions include comprehensive video tutorials to
: Standard papers used in traditional art. Recycled Paper : Grittier, eco-friendly textures.
Includes options ranging from clean, subtle pulp to rustic, moldy paper textures. Why Choose Infinite Pulp for Your Workflow?
The textures are high-resolution, ensuring that your final artwork is print-ready. The scans capture the texture of various paper types, from smooth vellum to rough watercolor paper. 3. Fully Customizable Infinite Pulp uses a non-destructive, multi-layer design
enabled to move and tile the duplicated texture across the new canvas area. Hardware Considerations:
Before Infinite Pulp , recreating this look digitally was a forensic exercise. Artists would scan photocopier dust, photograph coffee stains, or meticulously layer Photoshop noise. Infinite Pulp abstracts this labor into algorithmic ease. It provides "texture rugs," halftone zippers, and grit brushes that mimic the process of decay, not just the result. By using these tools, the artist is no longer painting a face; they are printing a face that has already survived a flood.