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Customize Procreate to suit your workflow. Adjust the look of the interface or mirror your canvas to a connected screen. Connect a third-party stylus, tweak the Pressure Curve, and personalize Gesture Controls to suit your style of working.
Go to Actions > Prefs to change the appearance and behavior of the Procreate interface. Do this using a series of easy-to-use toggles and sliders.
These interface options toggle between states.
The Procreate interface offers two visual modes. Dark Mode is an unobtrusive charcoal interface that keeps the focus on your artwork. Light Mode is ideal for higher contrast when you’re working in bright environments.
By default, the sidebar is on the left-hand side of the screen. Toggle the Right-hand interface switch to move it to the other side of your canvas.
When you switch the Brush Cursor on, the outline of your Brush shape will appear when you touch the canvas. This is so you can see in advance the shape of the mark you’ll make.
Connect a second display via cable or AirPlay and toggle Project Canvas. The second display will show your canvas only, full-screen - with no interface, zoom, or interruptions. This helps you work on fine details in Procreate while keeping an eye on the big picture.
These interface options use sliders for fine adjustments.
One of Procreate’s most powerful shortcuts is the two-finger hold for Rapid Undo. Hold two fingers to the canvas, after a brief delay, Procreate will rapidly move back through Undo steps. This lets you quickly get rid of unwanted changes. This slider allows you to set the length of the delay before Rapid Undo activates, from no delay to 1.5 seconds.
When you commit a selection, it becomes a selection mask This shows you which areas of the canvas are masked (not selected). Masked areas look like moving diagonal shading and are semi-transparent by default. Adjusting the Selection mask visibility slider changes this transparency. This makes your Mask more or less solid. If you have an active selection mask while you adjust the slider, you'll see the change in real-time.
Three menu options in the middle of the Preferences panel control Procreate’s touch and pressure responses. You'll find these by tapping Actions > Prefs.
Connect any supported third-party stylus using Bluetooth.
Tap Connect third-party stylus to bring up the Connect Stylus panel. Here, you’ll find a list of the types of stylus Procreate currently supports.
If you’re using an Apple Pencil, there’s no need to connect it. You can start drawing with it right away.
Ensuring that your stylus is switched on, tap on your stylus brand to scan for your device. When Procreate finds it, the Connect Stylus panel will update. This will show options and readouts specific to your stylus.
You can assign your favorite functions to your stylus buttons as shortcuts, and track how much battery you have left. Options may vary from stylus to stylus.
Like the Apple Pencil, smart styluses interact with Procreate to change the opacity and thickness of your brush strokes depending on how hard you press. This mimics the way physical art tools respond to pressure.
Learn how to adjust Procreate’s overall Pressure Curve below. You can also edit pressure curves for individual brushes in the Brush Studio .
Tweak Procreate’s overall Pressure Curve to match stylus sensitivity to the way you draw.
The Apple Pencil has a huge dynamic range. This means you have to press down very hard to reach 100% pressure or opacity. Artists who draw with a lighter touch might find they don't enjoy the full range of the Pencil’s sensitivity using the default settings.
To get the most out of the Apple Pencil, use Procreate’s customizable Pressure Curve. Do this to adjust the feel of your Pencil or stylus to your liking.
Tap Edit Pressure Curve to open the Pressure Curve panel.
The default curve is a straight diagonal line. Drag this line to move it as a smooth curve, or tap to add up to six handles.
The horizontal (side to side) axis of the graph defines pressure. Positioning the curve further to the left means your Pencil will respond quicker to lighter pressure. Pushing the curve to the right means you will have to press the Pencil down harder to get a response.
The vertical (up and down) axis sets the value of the Pencil’s output. Maximum value (top) means the brush is producing 100% of its possible thickness or opacity. Moving toward the minimum value at the bottom means a thinner or more transparent stroke.
To remove a handle, tap it again. To undo all your changes and return to the default curve, tap Reset.
Tap Actions > Prefs > Gesture Controls to open the Gesture Controls panel. This panel gives you the ability to modify shortcuts for a variety of Procreate's tools.
Most shortcuts toggle on or off. You can set up multiple shortcuts for the same function. Or, deactivate all shortcuts from functions you rarely use. Where a shortcut triggers by touch-and-hold, use a slider to set the delay before that shortcut triggers.
You cannot assign the same shortcut to two different features. Activating a shortcut on one feature can cause a conflict with another features already using the same shortcut. If this is the case, a yellow warning icon will flash up next to the conflicting feature.
Some features, like QuickMenu , Layer Select , and Drawing Assist , aren’t enabled by default. Choose any gesture option in those sections of Gesture Controls to enable them.
To learn how to perform any of the gestures listed below, scroll to the Gesture Glossary at the bottom of this page.
These three features affect the way you draw, paint, smudge, and erase on the canvas.
Note: Assigning the Apple Pencil shortcut to any three of these categories overrides any other tool the Apple Pencil has been assigned to.
If any of these options are active, paint strokes made with that method will always smudge. This occurs no matter which tool is selected.
Learn more about Smudge .
If any of these options are active, paint strokes made with that method will always erase. This occurs no matter which tool is selected.
Learn more about Erase .
The Tap Modify button and Apple Pencil double-tap options will toggle Drawing Assist on the current layer.
If any of the other options are active and a Drawing Guide exists, paint, smudge, and erase strokes made with that method will always be Assisted. These will snap to the guide, even if the current layer is not Assisted.
Learn more about Drawing Assist .
It’s worth setting memorable shortcuts if you often sample color, draw perfect shapes, or quick-access multiple actions.
Choose your favorite method to invoke the Eyedropper. On Tap Modify Button or Apple Pencil double-tap, the Eyedropper invokes in the same place you last marked the canvas. From there you can drag it to your desired location. With all methods, the Eyedropper will dismiss as soon as you lift your Pencil or finger from the canvas.
Learn more about Eyedropper .
Draw and Hold is the default method for QuickShape. Draw a stroke and keep your finger or pencil held to the canvas at the end to invoke QuickShape after a brief delay. All other methods invoke QuickShape on the last stroke you made before triggering the shortcut.
Learn more about QuickShape .
When you invoke QuickMenu, you can dismiss it by tapping off, continuing to paint, or selecting a QuickMenu option.
If you invoke QuickMenu by touching the canvas, leave your finger or Apple Pencil pressed down. Drag to instantly select a QuickMenu option. Once familiar with the location of each item in your radial QuickMenu, you can perform this movement quickly. This becomes so quick a simple flick in the right direction will trigger the option you need.
Learn more about QuickMenu .
Set up a simple shortcut to toggle Full Screen mode, or set it to invoke and dismiss automatically.
The first four shortcuts in the list toggle Full Screen on and off. Trigger the action once, and it will invoke Full Screen. Trigger it again and it will dismiss Full Screen and return to the normal interface.
Automatic
If Automatic Full Screen is enabled, then the interface automatically dismisses as soon as you start painting. Once you lift off the canvas, the interface will return after the set delay. Drag the slider to the left to decrease this delay, or to the right to increase it.
When in Full Screen mode, you can always return to the interface by tapping the button in the top left corner.
Quickly clear, select, cut, copy, or paste content on your Layers.
Choose the best method to clear your layer. Clear Layer will delete all the content from your current Primary layer. You can use Undo to reverse this action.
The Scrub gesture is the default Clear Layer shortcut. Clear Layer cannot be used to invoke any other feature.
You can also clear your layer from the Layer Options menu.
Learn more about Layers .
Select from a variety of options for invoking the Copy Paste menu. Once invoked, the Copy Paste menu remains until you tap the canvas or select a menu option.
Learn more about Copy Paste .
Select layers without using the Layers menu by touching their content on the canvas.
Once you’ve chosen a touch shortcut for Layer Select, invoke it, then hold and drag on the canvas. The Layer Select pop-up will appear. When you pause for a moment, the pop-up will expand to show all available layers visible in that location.
Once invoked and expanded, you can lift off the canvas and the Layer Select pop-up will remain. The pop-up remains until you tap off or select a layer.
Alternatively, drag toward one of the layers before releasing the initial gesture. Release to instantly select that layer.
Learn more about Layers and Selections .
Refine the way your gestures work with these general gesture controls.
Toggle on Disable Touch actions. From this point on, finger touches will only invoke gesture shortcuts. You will no longer be able to Paint, Smudge, Erase, or do anything other than use gesture shortcuts with your fingers.
This option switches off two-finger tap to Undo and three-finger tap to Redo.
This option controls whether the pinch-zoom gesture also allows rotation. It is on by default.
When you’ve finished with the Gesture Control panel, tap Done to return to your canvas.
Learn how to perform all the gestures available in Gesture Controls.
You should perform gestures on the canvas area of your screen unless otherwise specified. Multiple gestures can sometimes combine (for example, Hold Modify Button + Touch). All combinations are listed here.
An extremely brief touch with one finger.
Touch or draw with one finger.
Hold one finger down in place for a second or so.
Use the tip of the Apple Pencil to touch or draw on the canvas.
Quickly tap twice on the flat area on the side of the Apple Pencil (Second generation).
Briefly touch the square button on the left-hand sidebar.
Hold down the square button on the left-hand sidebar.
Hold down the square button on the left-hand sidebar while drawing on the canvas with the Apple Pencil.
Touch the canvas with one finger while holding down the square button on the left-hand sidebar with another finger.
Draw with a finger or pencil and hold at the end of the stroke to turn your hand-drawn shape into a perfect shape. (Gesture used for QuickShape only)
Brush three fingers back and forth on the canvas to clear the layer. (Gesture used for Clear Layer only)
Brush downwards on the canvas with three fingers.
Tap with four fingers at once.
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If you didn't find what you're looking for, explore our video resources on YouTube or contact us directly. We’re always happy to help.
More resources available at help.procreate.com