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Participant
July 11, 2012
Answered

where are the brushes stored other than presets > brushes

  • July 11, 2012
  • 4 replies
  • 85639 views

I have installed an abundance of brushes usually by double clickling from the download folder, and now I want to back them up. I have ran .abr spotlight searches and found nothing; they are also not in the photoshop > presets > brushes folder. Only the stock brushes are in there. Where can they be??

I'm on mac osx by the way. Thank you!

    This topic has been closed for replies.
    Correct answer Trevor.Dennis

    I did some of  my own research on this, and found this useful link: 

    http://www.creativepro.com/article/photoshop-brushes-frequently-asked-questions

    Follow these instructions to install brush sets:

    1. Download or move the .ABR file to a permanent location on your computer. This could be into the Photoshop Brushes folder (full paths below) or a central location you create for Photoshop brushes. To place it in Photoshop’s existing brush folder, move or copy the .ABR file to:

    Windows: C:\Program Files\Adobe\Adobe Photoshop CSx\Presets\Brushes\
    Mac OSX: Applications/Adobe Photoshop CSx/Presets/Brushes/

    2. Open Photoshop and select the Brush tool.
    3. On the Options bar, click the down arrow beside the brush shape preview. This will open the controls for brushes.
    4. From the brush control popup, click the right-facing arrow in the top right corner and select Load Brushes or Replace Brushes.
    5. When the Load Brushes dialog appears, navigate to the location where you placed the .ABR file and then open that file.
    6. If you chose the Replace Brushes command, Photoshop will remove any existing brushes from the Brushes palette, leaving you with only the newly loaded set. However, if you chose the Load Brushes command, Photoshop will add the new brush set to the end of the list of brushes.
    7. Start brushing!

    janelle


    This is one of those must have links for all Photoshopers

    http://helpx.adobe.com/photoshop/kb/preference-file-functions-names-locations.html

    4 replies

    Participant
    November 28, 2019

    Found an easy way to locate the Custom Brush Library. Go to the hamburger icon in the top right hand side of the Brush palette, select 'Open Brush Library' then 'User Defined,' it should be in there 😁 BTW I am working with Illustrator 2020 on Macintosh

     

     

    Participant
    July 23, 2021

    I'm very new to all of this stuff so I'm sorry If I sound dumb. Can you maybe tell me about the types of files I can import to photoshop in regards to brushes? Sometimes I find brushes that say that I can import them but then ps keeps kicking them back. Am I supposed to be doing something first? I know that zip files need to be opened first but besides that I feel like I'm missing something.

    Trevor.Dennis
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    July 24, 2021

    Hi Kerry.   

     

    Photoshop brushes come in .abr format.  I don't actually know if the same files are compatible with both Windows and Mac.  

     

    Good locations to find brushes are the Get More Brushes link 

    SSelect the brush tool. Right click inside the document window

    Click on the little cog icon in the top right corner (my red highlight

    Click on Get More brushes.

    Maybe start with the Kyle Mega Pack which has hundreds of presets.

     

    Brusheasy

    Photoshop Free Brushes - (2,510 Free Downloads) (brusheezy.com)

     

    Deviant Art

    Search 'brushes' on DeviantArt - Discover The Largest Online Art Gallery and Community

     

    For specialty brushes for illustration, one of my favourites are the Aaron Blaise sets, but they cost a few dollars each.  The great thing about these sets is that Aaron has wee videos that explain how to get the best out of them.

    Aaron's Custom Photoshop Brushes - Set 1 (creatureartteacher.com)

     

    If you need more info, please describe what sort of work you want to do with the brushes.  If you find an interesting brush, check it out in the Brush Settings panel to see how it works, and experiment making your own presets and groups.

     

    Please ask about anything you are not sure about.  We enjoy doing this stuff.

     

    JaxSparrow
    Participant
    November 22, 2015

    In Adobe CC through CC 2015 Photoshop if you would like to replace the default set of brushes with a set you spent a lot of time setting up here are the steps

    1) Rename your set of brushes to "Default Brushes.abr"

    2) Rename the adobe PS default brush set to anything you like I left it in the directory and called it "Default Brushes old.abr"

    3) Go to the directory "C:\Program Files\Adobe\Adobe Photoshop CC 2015\Required" in there you will find the file called "Default Brushes.abr" this is the file you MUST rename to old

    4) Paste your set you renamed from step 1 into the directory in step 3 then open Photoshop hit the F5 key and your custom brush set is now the default set!

    Swandive stream
    Inspiring
    June 29, 2015

    OS: Windows 7

    If you are using Photoshop CC 2015 the brushes are stored under:

    C:\Program Files\Adobe\Adobe Photoshop CC 2015\Presets\Brushes

    To make them easier to find in future I recommend creating a shortcut to them (windows: Right-click-> New-> Shortcut)

    Trevor.Dennis
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    June 29, 2015

    You might be better served using the hidden folder

    C:\Users\your user name\AppData\Roaming\Adobe\Adobe Photoshop CC 2015\Presets\Brushes

    as it works for both 32 and 64bit versions.

    Swandive stream
    Inspiring
    June 29, 2015

    Thank you. That answers another question I posted separately. Much better workflow

    Noel Carboni
    Legend
    July 11, 2012

    Unfortunately I'm no Mac expert, but I'd suggest they're in your (hidden) user Library somewhere.  Maybe Station_two or another Mac expert can offer more specifics.

    -Noel

    Participant
    July 11, 2012

    Im no mac expert either =/ I guess I'll just be more careful with the way I install brushes from now on. But if anyone else knows it would be great. Thank you guys!

    Noel Carboni
    Legend
    July 11, 2012

    I did some of  my own research on this, and found this useful link: 

    http://www.creativepro.com/article/photoshop-brushes-frequently-asked-questions

    Follow these instructions to install brush sets:

    1. Download or move the .ABR file to a permanent location on your computer. This could be into the Photoshop Brushes folder (full paths below) or a central location you create for Photoshop brushes. To place it in Photoshop’s existing brush folder, move or copy the .ABR file to:

    Windows: C:\Program Files\Adobe\Adobe Photoshop CSx\Presets\Brushes\
    Mac OSX: Applications/Adobe Photoshop CSx/Presets/Brushes/

    2. Open Photoshop and select the Brush tool.
    3. On the Options bar, click the down arrow beside the brush shape preview. This will open the controls for brushes.
    4. From the brush control popup, click the right-facing arrow in the top right corner and select Load Brushes or Replace Brushes.
    5. When the Load Brushes dialog appears, navigate to the location where you placed the .ABR file and then open that file.
    6. If you chose the Replace Brushes command, Photoshop will remove any existing brushes from the Brushes palette, leaving you with only the newly loaded set. However, if you chose the Load Brushes command, Photoshop will add the new brush set to the end of the list of brushes.
    7. Start brushing!

    janelle


    Janelle, I think that particular set of instructions is out of date, precisely because it refers to the system level Photoshop installation areas, rather than the user areas.  It has fallen out of favor for users to install things in system areas.

    -Noel