Fun + Easy Sunbursts in Procreate: Explore Clipping Masks, Color & Pattern | Kelley Bren Burke | Skillshare
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Fun + Easy Sunbursts in Procreate: Explore Clipping Masks, Color & Pattern

teacher avatar Kelley Bren Burke, Artist & Educator

Watch this class and thousands more

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Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Lessons in This Class

    • 1.

      Hello & Welcome

      1:48

    • 2.

      Class Project & Resources

      0:46

    • 3.

      Let's Get Started

      4:33

    • 4.

      Let's Explore Color

      8:07

    • 5.

      Let's Stamp Some Sunbursts

      5:05

    • 6.

      Let's Explore Clipping Masks

      5:14

    • 7.

      Let's Add Shadows

      7:34

    • 8.

      Let's Do A Color Makeover

      4:03

    • 9.

      Congratulations!

      0:37

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About This Class

Ready to explore color, patterns and clipping masks in Procreate? In less than an hour, you’ll create a multicolored Sunburst that looks like a cut-paper collage. This class is perfect for Procreate beginners and pros alike.

I was googling “ideas for collage art” and I saw a paper version of the Sunburst we’ll be making. I dabble in paper collage. It’s so much fun, but it leaves me with a table full of paper scraps. I usually prefer being creative on the couch with my dog Murphy by my side. That’s why we’re creating on our iPads today. 

All you need is:

  • iPad
  • The Procreate app
  • A compatible stylus

I’ll supply fun Procreate brushes and stamps for you. 

We’ll go through these steps for our class project: 

  1. We'll quickly review Procreate’s Color Harmony tool. It’s a super useful tool for creating beautiful color palettes. 
  2. Then we’ll start stamping! I’ll provide 6 different sunburst stamps that we’ll layer to create a full Sunburst. 
  3. We’ll use Clipping Masks to apply patterns each Sunburst. I’ll supply ten pattern brushes, but you can choose to use any pattern or texture that you’d like. 
  4. We’ll add easy shadows to each Sunburst stamp. 
  5. Finally, we’ll duplicate our canvas and give our Sunbursts a quick and easy color makeover. 

Ready for some fun, creative play? Let's get started! 

Music courtesy of Bensound

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Meet Your Teacher

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Kelley Bren Burke

Artist & Educator

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Level: Beginner

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Transcripts

1. Hello & Welcome: Ready to explore colors, patterns and Clipping Masks in Procreate? And in less than an hour, you'll create a multi-colored sunburst that looks like a cut-paper collage. This class is perfect for Procreate beginners and pros alike. I'm Kelley Bren Burke. I'm an artist living in Minneapolis, Minnesota. I quit my corporate job in 2015, and I have been self-employed ever since. I love creating collage art in the Procreate app. I was Googling ideas for collage art, and I came across a paper version of the collage we'll be doing today. I love doing paper collage, but it leaves me with a table full of scraps. And I usually prefer to be creative on the couch with my dog Murphy by my side. And that's why we're creating in Procreate today. All you need is an iPad, the Procreate app, and a compatible stylus. I'll supply fun stamp brushes and pattern brushes for you to use for this class. We'll go through these steps for our class project: First, we'll quickly review Procreate’s color harmony tool. It's a super useful tool that will help you create beautiful color palettes. Then we'll start stamping. I’ll supply six different sunburst stamps that we’ll layer to create a full sunburst. Next, we'll use clipping masks to add patterns to each sunburst. I’ll supply ten different pattern brushes, but you can use any pattern brushes or texture brushes that you'd like. Then we'll add easy shadows to each sunburst stamp. Finally, we'll duplicate our canvas and give our sunburst a quick and easy color makeover. Are you ready for some fun creative play? Let's get started! 2. Class Project & Resources: For the class project, you'll create your own sunburst collage. I'll walk you through every step. And I'm providing all of the Procreate brushes and stamps that you'll need. To access these goodies, click the Project and Resources tab from a browser. You won't be able to access them from the Skillshare app. If you've any questions, I've got you! Click on the Discussions tab and I will respond to every question and comment. As always, I would love to see what you create. Upload your project by clicking on the class Project and Resources tab. Your work will inspire me and others. I'll leave a comment back for every class project. Ready to take the first step? I will see you in the next lesson. 3. Let's Get Started: Welcome back. In this lesson, we are going to create our canvas and some center circles that will help us stay centered for the rest of the project. Let's get started. To create a canvas, I'm going to hit this plus sign and then I'm going to hit this folder. Procreate will default to pixels, but I'm going to choose inches. And I'm going to choose a 12 by 12 inch canvas. So there I have a 12 by 12 canvas and a DPI of 300, which is an excellent print quality. And for my iPad that gives me 47 layers, which is plenty for this project. And I'm going to tap Create and we have our new canvas here. I'm gonna go to the Gallery and grab a subtle paper texture. It's so subtle, you might not be able to see it, but it's there. And I'm going to bring it over to my new canvas by doing a three-finger drag down. I'm going to hit Copy. And then I'm gonna go back to my Gallery, tap on the new canvas. And do another three-finger drag down and hit Paste. And there it is. It doesn't fit perfectly, but I will stretch it out. The Selection arrow is chosen and it's on Uniform, which is what I want. So I'm just going to stretch it out to cover the canvas. And that looks good. Now we're going to create a circle. The color palette I'm using has yellows and greens and this brown color. I will choose a contrasting color. I will choose like a red to draw my circle. And for this class, you are getting two different sets of brushes from me. The first one is the stamps which we'll be using. You'll also be receiving these textures that I've created that we'll do on top of our stamps. But more on that later. I use the Procreate default monoline brush a lot. And so I put that in each of the brush sets for you just so you would have it handy. So I have that in a contrasting color. And I'm going to create a new layer just to stay organized. I'm going to label my paper texture. You definitely want to be on a new layer for this circle, because it won't be part of the project. It's just to help us get started. I'm also going to set up the drawing guide for us by hitting Wrench > Drawing Guide > Edit Drawing Guide. And I'm just going to bring the grid size all the way up. And that just helps us see the center easily. And if you'd like, you can adjust the opacity and the thickness and the color of this line to anything you'd like. And then when you're done - this happens all the time. When I go to hit Done and it changes the color of the grid to white. So I'm going to more carefully hit Done. Grab my monoline. I'm on a new layer and I'm going to just draw a rough circle. And Procreate will help me make it a perfect circle up here If I tap Circle. And then I'm going to create another layer above that and create a small circle in the middle. I'm going to hit Edit Shape and make that a circle as well. I'm just going to fill that in with the red color. I'm gonna go back to my original circle layer and tap the Selection arrow. And I have snapping on here with Procreate. Right now, my Distance is 15 and my Velocity is 3.1 and Snapping and Magnetics is on. So I'm going to center and I'm just waiting to get those gold lines. As kind of a bullseye here. There we go, we have the gold lines. I think I want to make this circle - now that I've done all that - just a tiny bit smaller. We want to think about our stamps and how we want them to be mostly within the circle. So we want some nice white space around there. I think that's pretty good. I'm going to turn off this layer and go to the little circle. I'm gonna go to the Selection arrow again, and I'm going to center that little circle, too. So there we go. I'm going to turn both circles on and I'm going to merge the two layers with a little pinch here. If you'd like, you can turn down the opacity on this layer a little bit so it won't distract you. So now that we have our canvas and our center circles, we're ready for the next step. In the next lesson, we'll be exploring color palettes. I will see you in the next lesson. 4. Let's Explore Color: Welcome back. In the last lesson, we created our canvas and our center circles. In this lesson, we're going to explore Procreate’s color tools to help us with the color palette. I am going to turn off this red layer since we don't need it right now. And I'm going to create a new layer to explore color palettes with you. I am going to use this color palette right here for my sunburst. You can use any color palette you have. If you're anything like me, you have lots already in Procreate, or you can use Procreate’s tools to create a harmonious color palette. So I'm going to show you how to do that. First, let me pick a color to start with. And I would suggest you do the same, just choose a color that you like. I'm also going to turn off the Drawing Guide because we don't need that right now. I'm going to start with this dark teal color. And I'm going to talk you through a couple of different kinds of color palettes. With this teal color, we could look at the color as a Disc. We could look at as Classic, or we could look at it as Color Harmony. And that's what we'll mostly be doing here. So if we tap here, there's different color wheel options that Procreate does for us. There's Complimentary, which is two colors that are opposite each other. So the opposite color for this teal is this color right here. And I'm actually going to put these two colors on separate layers. So I'm going to take the second color and grab the Selection tool and do a lasso around it. I'm going to do a three-finger drag down and a Cut and Paste. So these two are complimentary colors. They're opposite each other. And you can create a whole palette with just these two hues by changing the Saturation and Brightness. Let me show you what I mean. I'm not digging this brick color right here, so I created a new swatch. So I'm going to go to Hue, Saturation and Brightness. And if I change the Hue, then it would no longer be a complimentary color palette. But if I just play with the Brightness, the Saturation - then it is still a complimentary color palette. And now I start to like that orange with that green teal color. And I could do the same with the teal color. I could duplicate that. Tap on one of the layers, bring it down. And I can go to my Magic Wand. Hue Saturation and Brightness. And again, not touching the Hue, but change the Saturation and Brightness. I like that color. And now it's looking already really different. And I could keep doing that. Bring this teal down again, bring this other guy up. Bring this orange dot down again, move the other guy up. And so now we're looking at this bottom orange. We could change that to a peachy color if we wanted. We could desaturate it. I like that color too. If you want to see if the color is better or worse to your eyes, you can tap on side of the screen and hit Preview. And so there's the original color and there's the new color. And I'm going to hit Apply. This is our bottom teal dot. I can do the same thing. Hue Saturation and Brightness. Adjust the Saturation. adjust the Brightness. And so I'm going to apply this. So all of these colors right here, these are all the same hue. These are all the same hue and they are all complimentary colors to each other. So you could do a complimentary color sunburst. And that would be a good choice because we're gonna be working with six different starburst stamps. So you could use something like this and it would be very contrasting and poppy. So that would be a great way to do it. I'm going to group these together by swiping and hitting Group. and I will label this group Complimentary. There's other options to explore here, but for now, I'm just going to discuss the analogous color palette. I hope I'm pronouncing it correctly. I'm going to grab a different color. Well I had a blue and an orange last time. Let me start with a green. I'm gonna do a green color here. I am going to move this up. And I'm just going to make it easy on myself by duplicating my circles right now. This is just a practice. It doesn't have to be tidy at all. So if we go back to the Color Harmony, you can see here that the colors are all kind of on top of each other just because it's such light color. But if we take this green and say - grab a brighter green right here - then we can see more clearly the relating colors. So let's just change the color of the green, so that's the green. And the other colors around it are this color right here, and this color right here. So these are all very similar colors. You could do that, but you could again play with the saturation and brightness to get different colors within there. So let's duplicate that. We could take this whole new group, we could flatten it. And we can play with the saturation and brightness of all the other circles at the same time. And then you can see what different effects you can get. Oh, that's pretty! I think that's really pretty. I'm going to keep that. So that again was within the same hue. And I'm going to move it over again. Let's click Save our color palettes just in case you want to use them later. So if you created some color palettes that you like, I'll show you how to create a color palette of them. If we tap on the screen here and add plus, we can hit Create new color palette. It'll be at the top. I'm going to call this one Harmonious Greens. And I'm just going to sample each color to create a color palette. So if I put my finger on here, then all I have to do is tap the color palette to create the color palette of all the colors. And again, if you're not in love with the colors that you created - no worries, we're just going to work with the colors we have. And part of the final lesson we'll be playing with colors again so we can totally have a redo with this one. It's really easy. So here we have our Harmonious Green color palette. There it is. I am just going to tuck this underneath here just in case we need it. Maybe I'll flatten it first. So I'm on the green color palette. I'm just going to hit Flatten because we don't need them individually. And there's my greens. I'm just going to tuck them in the background and turn them off. And here is our complimentary color palette that we started out with. And let's create a color palette with that one too. I'm going to sample this color. And then I'm going to hit plus up here and create new palette. And I'm going to call this one Complimentary. And do the same process. Sample the color, tap it here. Sample it, tap it here. So we have some color palettes. Again, I'm going to flatten this one and just tuck it underneath the paper texture and turn it off. I'm going to bring back our centering dots that we created earlier. So now that we have our canvas and our center circles, we're ready for the next step. I will see you in the next lesson. 5. Let's Stamp Some Sunbursts: So we have our two color palettes that we created. You can use those color palettes or any color palette you have that you might like. We are creating six different starbursts. So keep that in mind. I'm going to be using this color palette that I created earlier. It has yellows and greens. It's a harmonious color palette because green and yellow are next to each other on the color wheel. Let's go to our brush sets that you received with this class. This is the first one, it's the color burst stamps and there's six of them. And later we'll be adding texture with the texture brushes that I've given you. But let's start with the color burst stamps. So here is my canvas. It has the paper texture and behind it, it has these other things. I'm going to bring these centering dots back up and turn them on because we want them for this part. But the color palettes are turned off. Above the background, I am going to create six new layers by tapping Plus. And we'll rename them in a second. We'll have one layer for each sunburst. And that's very important because that will make it easy to add texture and change color later. So right now, I am just naming these simply one through six. Okay, so we have our six layers and they're numbered. And we are going to start with starburst number one. And this is the color palette I'm using. I'm going to choose to use the darker colors on the bottom and the lighter colors on top For more of a dimensional look. You can do it any way you'd like. I'm going to start with this dark green. Starburst one, layer one. And I'm just going to stamp it here. My stamps sizes are pushed close to max here. This one is 91%. I'm going to center each one on the canvas. And what I want is for the center of the sunburst to be in the center of that little pink dot. So let's keep going. Layer two, starburst two. And I'm going to grab a different color. I'm going to grab this one right now. And that got really off-center. But no worries, we can just move it and center it right here. The outer circle is sort of a guideline. The lines will be past that a little bit and that's fine. But we just want to use that as a general guide for size. Layer three, starburst three. I am going to choose this pale green color. I'm going to center it as best I can, but we're gonna go back and re-center things later. So no worries if it's not quite right. Layer three, starburst three. For this I’m going to grab this pale yellow color and center it. Layer five, starburst five. Let's see what we have for colors here. I'm going to do this pale green, center it. And then layer, six starburst six - this bright happy yellow. So I'm seeing a couple of things here with my pale green sunburst. It has gone off the page. Could be a little bit too big. So what I'm going to do is just tap on my Selection arrow when I'm on that layer. Make it a little bit smaller. It's hard to see if it's centered here, but we'll work on that later. And it's clipped off here because it went off the page and was de-selected. So if I choose eraser and my new Procreate monoline that I have there, I can just kinda trim that right there. That looks pretty good. I think the overall size is maybe a little bit big. So what I'm gonna do is group these layers together, tap on the whole group, grabbed the Selection arrow. I'm on Uniform. And make it just a little bit smaller over all. I want some nice white space around the edges there so it doesn't feel crowded. Now we're just going to turn off these layers. And make sure that they're centered one-by-one since we've been adjusting the size and everything. So this first dark green layer - center it with a little circle there. Turn that off, go to this one. Center it. We want to make sure that you're on the right layer for this when you’re moving it around. Make sure I didn't move that one around. We're good. And our yellow. And I'm going to turn them all back on. I think that looks good. You should have six layers of sunbursts. And if you don't like your colors, no worry, we can change that. In the next lesson, we are going to be adding texture to our sunburst with our pattern brushes. I will see you in the next lesson. 6. Let's Explore Clipping Masks: Welcome back. And congratulations because you are over halfway through this class! In this lesson, we are going to be adding some fun textures to our sunburst. Let's get started. I no longer need my centering dots, so I'm going to turn that off and tuck it in the background. And I can flatten my background or collapse it so it's not as distracting. So now all we have is our paper texture on our different starburst. And I'm going to use, for my textures, I'm going to use a color that an off-white. So if you go to value and you tap on this one, the hex code for this off-white is FA F5. F5. If you want to use a pure white instead, the hex code for that is six f's. You could really use any color you want. But I think to start, let's just do a white or off-white. So we're kind of on the same page, so to speak. What we're gonna do is we're going to create a new layer above all of the starburst as a clipping mask layer. And we're going to then group the two layers together. So let me show you what I mean. I'm tapping on each starburst and adding a layer by hitting plus above it. And then I'm going to be grouping the layers together. So each starburst has a blank layer above it. Then we are going to make each of those blank layers a clipping mask by tapping on the blank layer and hitting clipping mask. And then you'll get this arrow right here. And then clipping mask will also be selected here. So let's keep going. Clipping mask. And if you don't know what that is yet, no worries. I will be telling you all about that, but right now we're just setting up. Okay. So we have our clipping masks. I am going to make sure I have my off-white here. And now I am going to go to mike ABB, sunburst textures. I'm going to start with this scribbly circles pattern brush. And I'm going to go on top of the dark green starburst and just apply the pattern to that. And what the clipping mask did was it allowed it just to apply to the dark green? And you can do different things with clipping masks are non-destructive. You can move them around. You can make the pattern bigger, you can make the pattern smaller. You can do any number of things that you would like. If we didn't have the clipping mask, then it would be hard to see here. Let me just add a different color so you can see it. If you don't have the clipping mask, then it's all over. And when you hit Clipping Mask, then it only applies to the pixels that are right below it. So let's just redo this again. Clipping mask. We have my scribbly circles. I have a blue color now, It's not what I want. Seminar. Clear this. Grab my off-white here and I'm on my clipping mask layer. And I have my scribbly circles here. And it's only applying to the dark green sunburst. We can tweak this later. For now, let's just get our patterns down. So let's just keep going and are kind of assembly line fashion. We're going to go up to the next clipping mask. We know it's a clipping mask because we have that little arrow and clipping mask is selected and we're going to choose a different pattern. I am going to do this E ******** poem here. And the clipping mask only is applying to this brown color. I think you understand the clipping mask now. So I'm gonna get rid of this blue color because I'm not liking it with this. Let's keep going. Starburst three, There's a clipping mask to that one. And I'm going to choose a different pattern. This one is called Frenchie collage. And I'll do that here. I like that. And let's get a different one. Let me do my music notes. Yeah, we'll do that. And there that's applying to that layer. Next one, since I did music, I'm gonna do a vintage sheet music one on the next one. And that's pretty subtle. It's this light one on top of the very pale green color and that's fine. And now we go to our last one for me, it's bright yellow. And I am going to do the one I'm calling KB, be alphabet dots on top of that one. Alright. So there's a lot going on here. I kinda like it and I kinda wanna tweak it. We will be playing with the blend modes of the clipping mask to kinda change the effects in the next lesson, as well as adding shadows for a cool dimensional look. And I will see you in the next lesson. 7. Let's Add Shadows: Welcome back. In the last lesson, we applied some patterns to our sunburst. In this lesson, we're going to start by creating shadows, and then we're going to play with the Blend Modes of our patterns. So let's get started. Like we've been doing for much of this class, we’re going to add shadows in kind of an assembly line pattern. And I'm going to start by grabbing a pure black. The value of pure black is all zeros and we're going to create shadows. We're going to do that by duplicating our sunburst. And let me show you what I mean. We're gonna do this six times. Duplicate the yellow sunburst, Alpha Lock it, fill it with black. Change the Blend Mode from Normal to Multiply. I like my shadow modes in Multiply Blend mode. And then un-Alpha Lock it. Because we need to un-Alpha Lock it in order to Gaussian Blur it, which is the next step after this. But let's just keep going like this. Number five. Duplicate > Alpha Lock > Fill Layer. Change the Blend Mode to Multiply. Un-Alpha Lock. Next one, Duplicate > Alpha Lock. Fill the layer, change the Blend Mode. Multiply, un-Alpha Lock. Duplicate > Alpha Lock > Fill Layer. Multiply > un-Alpha Lock. Okay? So we are done with that part of it. It doesn't look any different now, but it will in a little bit. So now we have a black duplicate of each sunburst in Multiply Blend Mode directly below each sunburst. The next step is we're going to add a Gaussian Blur. And you cannot add a Gaussian Blur if it is Alpha locked. So if you have those checkerboards and Alpha Lock is on, it won't work. So this is how you would do It. Magic Wand > Gaussian Blur. And you drag it over and nothing's happening. That is because it is Alpha Locked. That's an easy mistake to make. I wanted to run you through that. So it's un-Alpha Locked. And then we go to Magic Wand > Gaussian Blur. And you can make the Gaussian Blur more or less intense by sliding your pen back and forth. Or your finger for that matter. That works too. In general, a Gaussian Blur of 6% or around that area works well. So we have that shadow applied to the bright yellow one. So we're gonna do the same in the assembly line fashion. Magic Wand > Gaussian Blur > 6%. Magic Wand > Gaussian Blur > 6%. So if we just do a quick visual check, it looks like all of them do have a shadow applied to them. The next thing we're gonna do is move the shadows and make it look like there's a light source coming in. So for our purposes right now, we're going to pretend that the light is coming at this angle onto the screen. And so then we'll want to move the shadows in this way. To move the shadows, we are swiping right on just the shadow layer of all of them. And that is kind of like informally grouping them. We're not going to name them and create a group, but they're all going to move together in unison. So we're going to tap the selection arrow. Then we're going to just tap two pixels down this way - 1, 2. And then we'll go this way -1, 2. And that just really subtly moves everything. I think that looks pretty good. Maybe just one more tap down this way. That looks good. So I'm going to unselect it. So now we have our shadows as if the light source is coming in that way. So then the shadows would be falling to the side of it. With shadows, I always like to - let’s go to this bright yellow one - turn them on and off to see what the effect is. Sometimes you could have like an unnatural-looking shadow. And you might want it more subtle by going to the Opacity here and bringing the Opacity down. I'm going to leave it right here. But if you wanted more subtle shadows, you could do that. You could go to each shadow layer and bring down the Opacity. But I'm going to leave it as it is for now. Okay, so now we have our patterns and our shadows. And now I'm going to play with Blend Modes on some of these patterns. What I'm doing is just looking at the patterns that are kinda jumping out at me and maybe calling too much attention to themselves. And I'm going to start with this brown layer here. So this is the E.E. Cummings poem, and it's this light white poem on this dark background. So let's play with Blend Modes here. Because this is a white color and off-white color, adjusting the Blend Mode to darker will not do anything for us. So the Blend Modes above Normal are darker. And in general, the ones below Normal are lighter. So those are the ones we're going to be playing with. And the best way to explore Blend Modes is just to tap on them and see what looks good. For this one, I think I do like the Soft Light. It's still there, but it's very different from the Normal Blend Mode, which is a lot brighter. Then I can keep on going and see if I like anything better than that. Darker is kind of interesting. But for now, I'm just gonna go to Soft Light for this one here. So that's a lot more subtle. Now let's go to what I call my Scribbly Circles pattern. And that's on this green. And let's play with the Blend Modes below Normal and see how that looks. The Overlay is kind of interesting. Hard Light. (laughs) I just got impatient cruised all the way down to the bottom. Sorry. I think what I might want for this one - I think I'm just going to change it to a Lighten Blend Mode right here. And it's just a little bit more subtle. We could keep going layer by layer for this one. But I think I like it for now. You can keep tweaking as you like, but right now, nothing is catching my eye too much. Maybe those scribbly circles I could bring down the Opacity just a little bit. Yeah. If you're not sure, you can make your canvas really small and make it really big. I think that looks really good. One of the fun parts of this exercise is - the way we've set it up - makes it really easy to explore different color palettes. And that's exactly what we're going to be doing in the next lesson. I will see you in the next lesson. 8. Let's Do A Color Makeover: Welcome back. In this lesson, we are going to have some more fun with color by completely changing the color palette of our original pattern. But I do want to keep this one. So I am going to duplicate it by swiping left on it and hit Duplicate. And here we have our yellow-green sunburst. And I'm going to find a completely different color palette to use with this. I'm going to use this color palette that I'm calling Pastel-y. It has some pinky peaches, blues, and beiges that will give us a whole different look for this. But before we do that, let me just show you some of the other color palettes that I've done here. This is like a kind of an autumnal-looking one. Here's a really warm one. This is like a sherbet. And this one is a complimentary color palette. We discussed those in the beginning. But this blue and this orange color are opposites on the color wheel. And then I just changed the saturation and brightness of each colors to create different colors. Here is a bright pastel-y one. Here is one with cool greens and blues. This is the first one I did. When I first started doing these, I did really skinny sunburst stamps. So there's a bunch more of them on this one. But that's another idea. This is just the flattened one and this is one with shadows and textures. So that just makes such a huge difference, doesn't it? Let's go back to the one that we just colored and change the color palette. You can use any colors you would like, or just watch as I change mine. I'm going to start at the bottom here. I have number one. I'm going to choose a dark blue and fill it in there. Oops, what did I do? I did not have Alpha Lock on. I'm kinda glad I did that so you can see what happens. So I filled the whole screen with that color. A two finger tap to undo that And instead I want Alpha Lock. So what I'll just do right now is Alpha Lock all of those so it doesn't happen again. So I have my blue fill layer. Go to the next one. Maybe I'll choose this dark beige color. Maybe I will choose this dark pink. Lighter blue, light pink. That is too close to the color of the page for me, so I'm gonna change it to something else. Let's try this beige color. That's better. And then we have our top one, this bright yellow, this lighter pink? Yeah. So here we have an entirely different look from our other one. I think for this bottom one - instead of having the darkest blue color - I'm going to choose that middle blue color instead. I think this looks really cool. So in just a matter of minutes, we changed this to this or something else. And you can keep coloring these into infinity just by changing the canvas color. Maybe I will just turn down these music notes a little bit on this light blue color. They're currently on Normal and I could just bring the Opacity down here. I have it at 65% and that looks good. I can't wait to see how you played with colors in your sunburst. So make sure that you post your projects in the Class Projects section. And you are finished with the class - almost! There is just one quick lesson ahead of you, and I will see you in the last lesson. 9. Congratulations! : Congratulations, you've completed this class. Thank you so much for joining me. I hope this class has sparked your creativity and expanded your Procreate knowledge. I'd love to see what you create, so please share it in the Class Project area. If you'd like lots more resources for Procreate and collage, check out my website, kelleybrenburke.com If you'd like to learn more about Procreate and collage, check out my other Skillshare classes. Want to be the first to know about new classes? Follow me on Skillshare here. Thanks again. I hope to see you soon!