While often associated with portraiture, the texture of the Nikko Rull is highly effective for:

Artists like Nikolai Lockertsen (the creator of the brush) use the Nikko Rull for speed painting, environmental concept art, and blocking out heavy forms. Its name derives from "roll" or "roller," mimicking a dense paint roller loaded with thick acrylic or oil paint. The primary characteristics of the brush include:

: Many artists use it exclusively for entire paintings, from rough sketches to final textures. The "Magic" Texture

Because Procreate’s .brush format is with Photoshop, you cannot directly import the default Procreate file. However, you can achieve the same look through these methods: 1. Download Replica ABR Packs

Because Procreate and Photoshop use different brush engines, you cannot directly import the native Procreate file. However, you can achieve the "Nikko Rull look" in Photoshop through these methods: Infinite Studio Painting a Landscape with the Nikko Rull brush in Procreate

: Pressing lightly yields a glaze-like transparency, while heavy pressure yields an opaque, sharp stroke. Step-by-Step: Recreating Nikko Rull in Photoshop

The magic of the Nikko Rull brush lies in its efficiency. Instead of constantly switching between a rendering brush, a texture brush, and a detail brush, you can complete an entire painting using just this one tool.

: Its heavy opacity and rectangular profile make it perfect for "roughing in" large silhouettes or architectural forms like buildings and mountains.

Avoid using the standard smudge tool. Instead, pick up the Nikko Rull brush, lower the opacity to around 30%, hold Alt/Option to color-pick neighboring tones, and lightly paint over transitions to blend them while preserving canvas texture. Troubleshooting Common Issues The Brush Feels Laggy

Set the to roughly 30% so your light strokes do not taper down into an invisible pixel point.

Show you how to if you're new to Photoshop.

If you prefer not to build the brush manually from scratch, several digital tool creators specialize in translating native Procreate properties into desktop formats.

While great on its own, using the Nikko Rull with the Mixer Brush Tool can produce incredibly realistic oil-painting effects.