I understand the left side, where the water reflects most of the sky and lighthouse, as expected. Just checking, in case I missed something or am not doing this correctly.ĮDIT adding a photo as an example of work that requires light reflection In theory, if one mirrors vertically, the reference circle should move horizontally in sync with the 'writing' brush, whereas vertically it should move in the opposite direction. There is a 'mirror' option in the clone brush settings, and I tried activating it, but it does not seem to have any effect. So I was thinking: would there be a way to do this using the clone brush, meaning cloning and mirroring at the same time?Īs far as I can see, the clone brush copies whatever you reference exactly as it is, only translated by a given fixed vector, so the 'reference' circle moves exactly in sync with the 'writing' brush. However, when you have several layers it might become complicated to do this properly. The only solution I can think of, apart, obviously, from painting everything again upside down, is to copy the landscape layer into a new layer, mirror it vertically, maybe reduce the opacity a bit, and move it to its correct position. Now you need to reflect the landscape into the water. Suppose you have painted a landscape with mountains and villages in the background, and you decide to put (lake) water at the bottom.
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