

Then open Procreate, click the brush tool so you get the list of the ones you already have, then click the plus in the top right. When you find a brush you want, it’ll open in Dropbox or in your iPad files, and you just want to click ‘save to my Dropbox’, I find that it’s useful to have a folder set up in Dropbox just for Procreate brushes so they don’t get lost and it’s easy to navigate to. It’s very simple, you just need a Dropbox account and your iPad.

To save you from that endless clicking marathon and the inevitable download of every free Procreate brush on the internet, only to use the same five (again, just me?!) I thought I’d do a roundup of my favourite free brushes, and the ones that you’ll actually use.īut first, you might be thinking, ‘Laura, I’ve only had Procreate for seconds, how do I add brushes to Procreate?’ Well, young Jedi, let me teach you.

Especially when all you want is to try and draw out your favourite Taylor Swift lyric in a slightly fancy way. If you’ve ever searched for Procreate tips, brushes, or anything like that, you’ll know you get thousands and thousands of tips, links and videos and it can all be a bit much.
