“Blending modes of the brush tool” is part of my Photoshop book “Learn Photoshop CC With Pictures” , which is more revised and covers more concepts than the online tutorials, feel free to check out the book by visiting my Learn Photoshop CC With Pictures Book Page.

Now you have a nice basic idea on how to use the brush tool. I am going to add to the knowledge you learned by explaining a very useful feature in drawing and creating effects. Which is the blending modes of the brush tool (it applies to other tools as well). Photoshop Blending modes are one of the most useful ways of mixing colours in Photoshop . They are an easy way to create many effects as you will see in this lesson and the next few ones. This lesson is a bit long because there are many blending modes I need to explain, so bear with me a little bit please~

I will explain only the general idea how each blending mode work. Which will makes it easier to understand them. The best way to understand how they really work is to experiment with them, just like almost anything in Photoshop~

Using Photoshop blending modes is easy, you just select the mode you want to use from the drop-down list and you paint away with the brush tool. As long you know the general difference between the various blending modes and how the colours get mixed you will be fine. Don’t worry about the math behind these modes right now. Just think of them as specially effects used in painting and you will be fine

There are many Photoshop blending modes to choose from. About 29 of them to be precise. We will take a look at each of them. And as I said, I won’t explain everything about them in full details. But I will make sure you will be able to be able to use them effectively. Because while it is certainly useful to understand the precise difference between all these modes. It is better that you get an idea on how to use them first. The goal of learning blending modes is to get to create the effect that you want to. Which in many cases can be done using more than one mode.

In short, I want you to spend less time learning how the blending modes work and more on how to apply these modes on your pictures. Because that’s what you are learning Photoshop to do, ne? ;D

If you found yourself confused during this tutorial, don’t worry much about it. The concepts I am explaining are confusing to anyone new to them. You will find yourself familiar with blending modes after you play with them for some time. These blending modes are not straight-forward to understand mathematically. So try to understand the close as possible how the end result usually is

The Normal Blending Modes

This group of blending modes are the most basic ones, and what they do is quite straightforward, which is why I called it the normal group.

Normal Mode

The normal mode if the default blending mode when you select the brush. When you paint with this mode, the colour you paint will cover any colour below it. Assuming all the other settings like flow & opacity are set to %100.

Dissolve

Another straightforward mode. When you use this mode, the edge of your strokes will become “fuzzy”. And just like the normal mode. Your strokes will cover the ones below them.

Behind

One of two blending modes that’s special to the brush tool only. And not applicable to the other modes that has blending modes as well. Usually, when you paint with the brush tool (like in the normal mode). The colour you add cover the strokes that are already there, but with the behind mode. The new strokes appears behind the ones that are already there, like this:- Simply speaking, the behind mode only covers the pixels that are already transparent and ignores the ones that are not.

Clear

Another mode that is special to the brush tool. That mode simply turn your brush into an eraser:-

The Darken Blending Modes

Think of these blending modes as the group that mixes two colours and always produce a darker colour than the two colors we mix. The results are subtly different with each mode, but as long you embrace the “it produce a darker colour” idea. Everything about these modes can be understood later.

Darken

Just like the name implies. The darken mode darken the colour you paint on. But how does it do that? It simply selects the darker colour of the one your are painting and the one you are painting on (covering). It does that on the Red, green and blue separately, so the results may not be exactly what you expect.

Think of it as “taking the dark value of each of the colors to produce a darker value”

Multiply

Multiply works in a similar way to Darken, in that it also produces a darker colour of the two, except that it multiply the values of the two colours instead of selecting the darker values of the green, red and blue.

It is tricky to differentiate the difference between Multiply and darken, as you can see in the picture below this section

The Multiply blending mode always produces a darker colour.

Color burn

Think of it as a way to produce a darker colour with more contrast, and as the name implies, this mode literally burn the colours by increasing the contrast in them.

Color burn works by increasing the contrast between the components of the two colours. Which is why the end result is usually so contrasted

Using white with this mode produces no changes

Linear Burn

Similar to colour burn, in that it seems like it burn the colours. But it is much nicer than its predecessor.

And again, the way Linear burn works similar to colour burn. Except that it decrease the brightness of the darker colour to achieve the end result. Which is why it has a “nicer” effect than colour burn.

Using white with this mode produces no changes Darker color Works similar to the darken blending mode. But instead of using the red, green and blue components of each colour. It simply choose the darker colour of the two. This is one of the easiest blending modes to understand Here is a couple of strokes created using the darker colour. It doesn’t matter which stroke is made first. As the darker colour will always choose the darker colour of the two all the time. Notice how black always wins. While the bright green to the right is always below all the other colours. Here is the darken group blending modes side-by-side The Lightening Blending Modes These blending modes are the opposite of the ones in the darken group. these blending modes mix twee colours to produce a lighter colour. If you understood how one group work, the other group works in the opposite way. Lighten The equivalent of the Darken mode. It choose the lighter colour of each of red, green and blue of the two mixed colours. Which results in a lighter colour of them Screen

While I am not sure why this mode was called by this name. Its name is a good way to understand what it does. Think of this mode as you are looking through a glassy screen that makes coloers lighters Black has no effect on the picture on this mode. The brighter the colour you use is, the better the lightening effect.

Color Dodge

The lighten group equivalent of the colour burn mode. It lighten the colours of the picture by “burning” the colour of the underlying picture. The result is a “burned” colour with a lot of contrast

Linear dodge

Similar to colour dodge in that it burns the colours. But it produces a more gentle result. This is the lighten group equivalent of the Linear Burn mode.

Using black with this mode doesn’t change any colour of the picture.

Lighter Color

One of the easiest modes to understand, this mode simply chooses the lighter colour of the one you are applying and the one on the picture.

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The Contrast Blending Modes

As the name suggests, the blending modes in the contrast group work by playing with the contrasts between the two colours. I personally call it the lights groups. As I tend to think of them as a direct way to create different kind of lights in my pictures.

The contrast group tend to increase the contrast by lightening the lighter colours from the one you are applying and darken the darker one

Overlay

Think of it as looking at the picture through a tinted glass. Which makes the effect it produces similar to the Screen mode. But the effect it produces is stronger. The following picture shows you the difference between the two modes:

The reason these two are similar because overlay uses both screen & multiply on the pixels, depending if they are darker or lighter.

Soft light

This is one of my favourite blending modes. It is easy to understand thanks to its name. It produces a soft light on the picture, the effect is so gentle that it is lovely to look at.

Hard Light

Think of it as a stronger version of the Soft Light mode. This is useful mode to create spotlight to your pictures

Vivid Light

Think of it as you are applying a very strong light to the picture. To the point that it, again, burns the colours. Along with the Hard Mix mode. This is the strongest way to burn colors among the blending modes as far as I know.

Linear Light

Think of this mode as applying an intense light to the picture. The details of the underlying picture can barely be seen behind it.

Pin Light.

From the look at it, the pin light is like a mild version of the linear light. It sheds a strong light you can barely look at, but it is less opaque that many of the details of the underlying picture can be seen through it. Pin light selects the darker or lighter colour of the one you are applying and the one of the picture depending whether the colour of the picture is above %50 grey level.

Hard Mix

This blending mode is similar to the Vivid Light. It works by adding the red,green and blue of the three colours of both colour colours you are mixing.

The other 4 Blending Modes

So far, I don’t have an accurate name to use for these 4 blending modes. So I called them “The Other 4”. Those 4 modes depend on the underlying math of the mode to produce the result. Think of them as the colour invert group if you like. Or that they take the colour away from the picture you are working on, because that’s kind of what they seem to do.

Difference

This mode takes the greater colour of the one you are applying and the one of the picture, and subtracts it from the other one. The result is a colour that is the difference between the two colours. Without doing the math, it is hard to predict what kind of colours this mode will produce.

Exclusive

A blending mode that is similar the Difference mode. But creates a result that has less contrast than the Difference mode

Subtract

As the name suggests, this mode subtract the value of the colour of you are applying from the color of the picture.

Divide

Another mode that does what it says. It divides the colour of the picture with the one you are applying.

The colour components modes

The last 4 blending modes work on the components of the colour. The Hue, Color, Saturation & Luminosity. Instead of green, red and blue. For the sake of making this tutorial easier to understand, I will assume that you have no idea what the Hue, Saturation, Color and Luminosity mean. So I am going to give you a brief description on them here, if you already know about these four. You can skip this part by clicking here :)

Hue

Hue is color, when you look at some colour, we tend to classify it as red, blue, green, yellow, orange, purple, or any other colour, disregarding whatever the colour is light or dark or whatever. This is the Hue component of the colour.

Saturation

The power of the colour. The bluer a blue is, the more saturation it has.

Luminosity

The amount of light the colour has, this component determines the amount of light the colour receives, and how much light or dark it is.

Now you are familiar with the HSL terms (shortcut for Hue, Saturation and Luminosity). Let’s get to the blending modes related to them~

Hue Blending Mode

Applies the colour of your brush on the picture while keeping the brightness and the luminosity of the picture pixels. This is one of the ways to change the colours in a given picture

Here, I changed the colour of part of the picture at the left by applying some red to it:-

Saturation Blending mode

Applies the Saturation of the colour of your brush while keeping the Hue and Luminosity

Luminosity Blending Mode

Applies the Luminosity (or Light you could say) of your brush colour to the picture. This is a good way to add light to your pictures by using a low flow value in your brush

Color

Applies Both Hue and Saturation of your brush colour and keeps the saturation of the picture colour. This is a very common way to change the colours of pictures.

Time to play with blending modes.

Now we are finally done with all blending modes, it is time to show you more examples of how to play with these modes on your pictures. There is virtually unlimited ways to do that. But giving you a head-on can surely help you see how great it is to be able to use them effectively:-

Having a graphics tablet can make it much easier to apply colours more precisely, even without using any selections or masks or whatever (we will get to these techniques letter). To select the tablet size, read my post on selecting the best size for your tablet

Make them both blue:- By using blue on the cat yellow eye, I managed to turn it into blue by using the colour blending mode. I made sure to set the flow low enough so I won’t get to add more blue than necessary, which would make the end result looks so unnatural. More manipulation of the colour can make the end result more real.

Turn the day into night by using Hard Light blending mode with and apply blue on the picture

Make your images brighter by applying overlay on them using a bright colour.

Bask you image in the sunlight by applying white on your picture using the soft colour. You will need to apply more than one stroke to create a similar effect to this one.

The dissolve mode can make interesting effect in its own. I bet every gang that has Photoshop uses it :D

Still with the Dissolve mode. I created a simple grass effect by applying various degrees of green on top of each other using that effect. Various things can be created that way in Photoshop

I turned this cute Japanese girl into a Geisha by darkening her lips with red. Darkening her eyebrows with black. And applying white over her skin using overlay. Doing things like that is easier with layers, which I am covering right after the brushes lesson.

Staying with white, I turned this penguin to white using layers and layers of soft light. He looks a little bit like chicken now.

Conclusion

Now with blending modes. You are more capable to do things with Photoshop. There are still some important things I want to teach you. Which will make you able to do even more with the program. Plus, they will allow you to benefit with what you learned so far much better.

~If you liked these tutorials please share them with friends and link to them. As this will make me capable of creating more of them in the future~

There is still one more lesson for the brush tool. After that, I will start teaching you other of the very useful tools in Photoshop~

Blending Modes Resources:-

I couldn’t have made this blending modes tutorial without some external help. Here are two articles that were very useful in filling gut gaps in my knowledge when it comes to the Photoshop blending modes.

The official Adobe website:- which helped me explain the different blending modes more than anything~

This page explains the math behind the blending modes in details. Something I kind of avoided. But you may find this very useful if you want to learn more about Photoshop blending modes later

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