What Makes a Good Procreate Brush?
There's no universal “best Procreate brush.” There's only: does this brush behave the way I expect while I'm actually drawing? (・・?)
So this is my checklist. It's meant to be boring and practical, because boring and practical is how you end up with a brush library that doesn't make you feel like you're digging through a junk drawer.
Disclosure: I make RuahStash Essentials. This checklist applies to any brush set, including mine.
The Checklist
- Stroke stability. Fast scribbles shouldn't fall apart, and slow curves shouldn't wobble like jelly.
- Predictable pressure. Light pressure stays light. Heavy pressure gets darker without an abrupt “marker jump.”
- Nice opacity build. Layering should feel gradual, not like the brush is either invisible or suddenly 100%.
- Good taper (when you want it). If a brush claims to be a liner, the taper should feel controllable and crisp.
- Tilt that makes sense. Tilt should help shading feel natural, not just “the same stamp but sideways.”
- Edges you can control. A textured brush is great. A brush that forces texture into every stroke, even when you're trying to be clean, is… exhausting.
- Texture that behaves across sizes. Scale the brush up and down. Does the grain still look plausible, or does it turn into giant repeating wallpaper?
- No obvious stamping artifacts. Watch for repeating shapes, weird spacing, or pattern seams that show up the moment you draw a long stroke.
- Organization. You should be able to remember what the brush is for. If everything is named “Brush 12,” you'll never use it.
- License clarity. If you plan to use brushes for client/commercial work, the license should be easy to find and easy to understand.
A 30-Second Brush Test
When I'm evaluating a brush, I do this tiny ritual:
- Draw a light line → heavy line → light again.
- Do a slow S-curve. Then a fast S-curve.
- Shade with tilt (if it's meant to shade).
- Stack 3–6 strokes on top of each other and see if it builds nicely.
- Scale the brush smaller and larger and watch what happens to the texture.
Red Flags (For Me)
- Pressure response feels “binary.”
- Edges look jagged in a way that feels accidental (not intentional texture).
- Texture repeats too obviously.
- The brush looks pretty in a promo image, but feels uncontrollable in a real sketch.
If You're Buying a Brush Set
Don't just look at the brush previews. Look at finished drawings made with the set. And make sure you can answer three boring questions:
- Can I install it easily?
- Can I use it commercially (if I need to)?
- If it doesn't work, is there a clear way to get help or a refund?
For RuahStash, those canonical pages are:
- Install: step-by-step guide
- License summary: commercial use allowed
- Troubleshooting: brushset import help
- Guarantee: 14-day satisfaction guarantee
- Support: contact page
If you only remember one thing: a good brush is the one that makes you want to keep drawing. Everything else is just sliders. (。•́‿•̀。)
