RuahStash - Brushes for Procreate

RuahStash - Brushes for Procreate
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Best Procreate Brushes for Illustration (My Actual Toolkit, With Drawings)

If you typed “best Procreate brushes” into a search bar with a tiny bit of desperation… hi. Same. (´。• ᵕ •。`)

There are a million brush packs. Most of them are fine. The real pain is when your pencil feels like one sketchbook, your ink feels like a different sketchbook, and your “paper texture” feels like… drywall. Then you're fighting the tools instead of drawing.

Disclosure: I made RuahStash Essentials. I'm biased. I'm still going to share the checklist I actually use. (づ。◕‿‿◕。)づ

A capybara illustration made in Procreate
One of my drawings, made in Procreate.

What Makes a Brush “Good” (for real drawing)

  • Pressure that behaves. Light pressure stays light. Heavy pressure goes darker without suddenly turning into a marker.
  • Tilt that shades. Tilt should feel like “side of pencil” shading, not just “same stroke, but sideways.”
  • Texture that stays consistent. If your pencil grain and your paint grain feel like two different worlds, finishing gets harder.
  • Clear jobs. I want to instantly know: sketch, ink, block in, paint, texture, blend. No mystery meat brushes.

A Few of My Drawings (so you can judge with your eyeballs)

Brush packs can say anything. The only thing that matters is: do you like what the artist makes with them?

My “Small Toolkit” Rule

I don't want 500 brushes. I want a small set I can memorize. For most illustrations, I try to keep my “active” brushes around 8–12:

  • 1–2 pencils
  • 1 charcoal/shader for quick values
  • 1 clean liner + 1 textured liner
  • 2–3 paints/washes
  • 1 paper texture + 1 speckle
  • 1 blender (optional, but comforting)

If You Want the “Everything Matches” Feeling

That's basically why I made RuahStash Essentials: a cohesive Procreate set with 45 brushes, organized into six families so sketch → ink → paint → texture feels like one sketchbook.

If You're Choosing ANY Brush Set, Use This Checklist

  1. Do I like the artist's drawings made with the set?
  2. Can I go sketch → ink → paint → finish without switching packs?
  3. Does the texture feel consistent across tools?
  4. Are the brush roles obvious (pencil, liner, paint, texture)?
  5. Is the license clear for client/commercial work?
  6. Does it make me want to draw right now? (This is a real metric. I don't care what anyone says.)

Okay. That's it. I hope you find brushes that make you want to draw today. (。•́‿•̀。)

Best Procreate Brushes for Illustration (My Toolkit) | RuahStash