Urban Designs Vectors Photoshop Brushes


This latest set of Photoshop brushes is made up of various “urban” vector designs. Some of the items are very recognizable as urban, or something that you’d find in a city. Others are designs, like various circles and such, that tend to go along with urban-based designs. If you check out my preview image, you’ll see what I mean! I’m sure you’ve seen these designs before.

All of these are very high resolution, with the average brush size being about 1600 pixels (some smaller ones are 1200 or so, the larger ones are 2100 or so).

Includes: barbed wire, buildings, chain link fence, various circles, street lamps, miscellaneous vector designs, razor wire, smoke, a smokestack, vector splatters, telephone poles, and more!

urban designs vectors brushes

Go Now to the Downloads Page!

Just a quick plug… some of you may have visited the Obsidian Dawn homepage and seen that I changed it into a portal for my various websites (and parts of Obsidian Dawn).  There is a link to here, my older artwork that was originally on Obsidian Dawn’s homepage, my graphic design info, my scrapbooking stuff (which is also now free, btw), AND a new website where I’ll be displaying all of my new artwork.   Most of it will be fantasy and nature related, and it’s going to be my professional portfolio.  I’m starting to get to a point where I think I’m decent enough to work as an artist professionally, so once I get a few more pieces in there I’m going to try to get some work at various companies (perhaps some fantasy trading card games, etc).  There’s just two paintings up there so far, but please feel free to check it out at Rainne.com!

 

Random Brushes Tip:

In the upper right hand corner of your Photoshop window is the “Brushes” tab (if you can’t find it, hit F5 to open it). You can drag that tab outside of that small docking area if you’re going to be doing a lot of work with your brush settings. Just click and drag it outside of the docking area, and where you drop it, a Brushes window will be created.

You can, in fact, drag all of your different tabs around like that. If you want your layers and channels tabs in separate windows, you can drag and drop one of them outside of the other to separate them.

Don’t worry, you can put them back where they were, too. If you drag and drop a tab next to another one, you will merge them into the same window… including that small docking area up at the top where the “Brushes” tab started out.

This can make it much easier if you’re planning on working in a particular tab a good deal. It’s also a great way to get rid of some stuff when you’re not using it much!

(If you want to change the order of the tabs, drag them outside of the window temporarily and then drag them back into the window in the REVERSE order from how you’d like them to appear from left to right. In other words, the most recent tab that you dragged into any particular area will always appear on the right side.)

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