
Shift is another important one, holding it to smoothing out areas of the mesh and then let go to get back to your brush. Other important hotkey for the tablet will be Ctrl, as masking is something you use a lot of in ZBrush holding it and click-dragging in the empty space in viewport will also Re-Dynamesh, another frequent action in dynamesh workflow. For text, you'll mostly be looking at: BT3, Sw3, Icn3, Sl3, K2, Numbers, Submenu2, Menu 2, and T Text1. However, you can also change it to the color of your choice by pushing the back color above the Range option and pick the color of your choice from the screen. It removes the gradient in the background and gives a solid gray color. You'll have to fool around to see which options affect what point of the interface. You can change the default gradient color by going into the document palette and select the Range setting to 0 (Zero). Release the mouse button to set the color. Important settings for working in ZBrush.

But it's up to you what you wanna do with that button. Click on one of the options (and hold), then drag your mouse over a color to sample. but I wanted to write a tutorial that would guide anyone new to ZBrush from. If you want to Load any file of the already saved UI color interface, click on the ‘Load UI Colors’ option and choose your desired file from the opened dialog box. And also, while you're drawing out a mask, you can then hold that button to move the placement of the mask outline you've drawn, over the top of the model (since you can't draw a mask selection directly on the character, you have to start it from off the model, otherwise you'll just be painting a mask). ZBrush UI Color Now, if you want to change the color of the UI of Zbrush, you can do it in a few steps, and for that, go to the Preferences menu and click on the IColors tab for its parameters. I have two buttons on my pen, so I like to set the other one to be "Space", which allows you to tap that button to instantly get access to your floating menu that has brush size, color, mask, etc, which is something you'll be changing a lot on the fly so it's nice not to have to touch tablet buttons for it. It makes sculpting much more natural and fluid. And on top of that, you can press it to make a given tool do the "opposite" of what you want, such as making your brush subtract instead of add, or inverting a mask or polyselect, and many more functions you'll learn. You can change the default gradient color by going into the document palette and select the Range setting to 0 (Zero). use these in your preferred application and you are all set: Poser, Vue, ZBrush. If you belong to the same category, this tip is for you. Hair Colors Settings Presets: Also included are hair color presets that.

(pressing pen down in empty space rotates, holding that button while doing so will pan, and letting go will start zooming). Though ZBrush’s default gradient color background looks good while sculpting your objects, many designers prefer to work on a solid color more than a gradient. Setting 'Alt' to one of your pen buttons is a pretty important one, as it will allow you to rotate, pan and zoom the model with just your pen, no tablet buttons.
