Quick iPad Patterns: Create Grid Seamless Repeat Patterns with Procreate | Esther Nariyoshi | Skillshare
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Quick iPad Patterns: Create Grid Seamless Repeat Patterns with Procreate

teacher avatar Esther Nariyoshi, Published Illustrator based in the US

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.

      Class Introduction

      0:12

    • 2.

      How to Make a Simple Grid Repeat Pattern

      7:41

    • 3.

      Test Your Patterns

      0:56

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136

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9

Projects

About This Class

Learn how to create rich, organic textures using Procreate on your iPad. This class is ideal for designers who want to add depth and realism to their digital artwork or product designs. Organic textures are incredibly versatile and can be used in everything from textile design to wallpaper, stationery, and more. By the end of this short class, you’ll have a set of seamless textures that can be applied to both digital and physical surfaces, bringing a natural element into your creative projects.

  • Class Format: Quick, under-10-minute class
  • Focus Motifs: Organic and modern squiggle
  • Skill Level: Designed for advanced beginners familiar with Procreate
  • Applications: Ideal for fabric, wallpaper, and digital project designs

Resources:

Brushes Made by Esther Nariyoshi | Coaching | Portfolio | Instagram | Youtube | Blog |

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Meet Your Teacher

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Esther Nariyoshi

Published Illustrator based in the US

Top Teacher

I have worked as an Art Director, Interactive Designer, and Creative Director before I fell in love with the beautiful world of surface pattern design and lettering. I greatly enjoy playful motifs, organic shapes as well as charms of geometry.

I love to work in vectors, the flexibility and scalability of vector artwork relax me. I usually start out an idea on paper, once my heart is struck by the sketches, I’d translate and articulate them in Illustrator, or other vector drawing apps on my ipad pro. My college and master’s degrees involve quite a bit of training in both science and art, which reflects my love for both worlds. I love the spontaneity of freehand drawing, but also enjoy the process of meticulous calculation and applying geometric principles to make my pattern.

When I am not working on patterns, I like to sew and cook

See full profile

Level: Intermediate

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Transcripts

1. Class Introduction: A 2. How to Make a Simple Grid Repeat Pattern: Let's create a new Canvas first. So press plus, and then Canvas, I'll do 4,000 pixels by 3,000 pixels and 300 DPI. Before I draw anything, I like to turn on the drawing guide when I create a pattern because this helps me to have a good idea about the position of my motifs, and you can also edit your drawing guide, and the grids can change in opacity, thickness, grid size. And you can also change the grid color by dragging this little dot at the very top. And once you're happy, you can hit done. And let's get started. For this pattern, I like to use a marker brush. This is from one of my brush sets. The reason I really like it is because we're going to see a lot of overlapping strokes, and having some variation of transparency and texture can really add the organic feel to the canvas. So I'm going to start with that. I will start by tilting my canvas upward because I tend to draw upward when I draw a straight line. And this nice grade gives me a good visual reference. So I will just follow this line. And you notice that I did not color all the way in to touch the edge. That is because if we do that, we'll end up with a truncated edge that looks super obvious that that's the border of our pattern. And we don't want to have that. And I'm going to choose a nice yellow sky. And I want to roughly keep everything along the grid. So these two are on the same layer, and I'm going to draw another one. Green one. Instead of drawing a thick one, maybe I just want to do back and forth for a thinner line. Okay. So now I want to create a vertical line with a darker color. For this one, I'm going to tilt this way and then just draw a straight line like that. This pattern will not be symmetrical, so I'm not worried about the mathematical space in between these. Now we have some basic motif that we can work on connecting from left to right from top to down. That's the logic of a repeating pattern, that is the left side will match to the right and the top side will match to the bottom. And now I'm ready to merge. I'm going to merge these two And then I want to create a new layer and then just fill it with whatever color that is active over there, and then decrease the opacity. The reason is because I want to use this filled layer as a guide to help me shift the motif to the left to the exact pixel as the width of my canvas. I want to create another duplicate for both the motif and the solids. If you look at our layers panel, we have a solid layer motif and exact solid layer and exact motif. We're just going to shift their position a little bit horizontally. Use your finger. Well, forgot to explain. So tap on this arrow icon and then use your finger to shift it to the left. You don't have to stop right in the middle. As long as the other pair, when you shift them, you feel the snap. See, there's still, like, overlapped area right here. Keep moving until You don't see the overlap anymore. And you can delete the solid layer. And now you can use the same brush. Actually, before that, you want to merge it down. And now you can use the same brush and same color to connect the gaps. So I'm going to go to the history. And I know I haven't changed my brush yet, so I can just connect like that. Same thing for the yellow. And moving down to green. And we're going to do the exact same thing for the top and down. So create a new duplicate and a new layer to fill it, lower the opacity. And then create another duplicate. We have two pairs. Select a first pair, move it up or down, and then move the other pair to match the position. Stop where the snap happens. Now, we don't need the guide layers anymore. We can delete the two solids. We can and then we can merge these two layers to work on the gaps. So I'm going to find the colors that I used and just connect these two. Same here. Go to the bottom. Whenever you draw something that touches the edges, you want to make sure the other side match. But if you draw something right in the middle, you don't have that worry. For example, if I were to create some squiggly lines here, I don't have to do the same thing we just did to make sure all the edges match. Let's do this. This will appear on the pattern without disrupting the flow. This is my pattern. If you like, you can export your into a PNG or JPEG and you can apply them to all kinds of mockups to see how they look like products. I hope you enjoy this. 3. Test Your Patterns: In this video, I want to show you how to quickly test your pattern tiles and save the preview right on your iPad. First, you want to take a screenshot of this, and then go to your photos app, either Lum press the URL or Lum press this QR code, which will take you to the default browser. If you have the P created open, you want to put it right next to your browser. I have all my motifs compressed into one layer, and I'm just going to drag and drop here, right on the browser, and you can adjust the scale here. If you like what you're seeing, you can also download your preview right on your iPad. Just tap on this button, and you should be able to either download or print by hitting this share button. Don't forget to bookmark this page, so you can come back to it whenever you're ready to test a new pattern.