Procreate brushes and tools for architects, interior and textile designers


Why I Created These Procreate Brushes (And Why They Actually Work)


Procreate brushes and tools for architects, interior and textile designers.
Floor plans, curtain sketches, fabric textures and client-ready visuals created in Procreate on iPad & iPhone.
Designed by a professional textile decorator with 18+ years of real client work.

Look, I need to be honest with you.

When I started creating digital designs in Procreate, I spent way too much time trying to make fabric textures look... not terrible. I'd download "professional" brush packs, and they just looked flat. Wrong. Obviously digital.

And it drove me crazy because I knew what real linen looked like. I'd spent years working with actual fabrics—touching them, understanding how light hits the weave, how different materials absorb color differently.

That knowledge was in my head, but somehow none of the digital tools captured it.

So I made my own.


The Textile Decorator Thing

I've been working with textiles for over a decade. Curtains, upholstery, decorative trimmings—the stuff that makes a space feel finished. And here's what I learned: texture isn't just visual. It's about how materials behave.

Real linen has this organic, slightly rough grain. Silk catches light differently depending on the weave. Jacquard has depth because of its layered structure.

When I moved into digital design work (floor plans, interior presentations, that kind of thing), I noticed most Procreate brushes were created by people who'd probably never held a fabric swatch in their lives. They looked at photos, sure. But they missed the nuances.

That's the difference with these brushes.

I didn't just scan textures. I recreated how they actually work—how pressure affects the grain, how colors layer, how light interacts with different surfaces.


Okay, But Do They Actually Save Time?

Yes. And I have proof.

I use these brushes in my own client work. Floor plans that used to take me 3-4 hours? Now done in 45 minutes. Interior presentations with realistic fabric swatches? Cut my time by more than half.

Not because I'm rushing or cutting corners, but because the tools finally do what I need them to do without fighting me.

Here's a quick example—I recorded myself creating an architectural floor plan using the stamp brushes:

Insert your YouTube video 

CLICK HERE

That's about 10 minutes of work that would've taken an hour manually drawing each element.


What Makes These Different?

I'm not going to claim these are "revolutionary" or whatever. They're just... thoughtfully made.

For example:

Our curtain brushes don't just stamp a texture. They layer properly, so when you add shadows or highlights, they respond the way real semi-transparent fabric would.

The architectural stamps aren't just shapes. They're drawn with the proportions and line weights that actually make technical drawings readable.

The texture brushes capture material properties—granular concrete, smooth marble, rough plaster—because I've worked with these materials and know what makes them look right.

Basically: If you've ever downloaded a brush pack and thought "this looks fake," that's the problem I tried to solve.


Who Actually Uses These?

Mostly architects and interior designers. People who need to create professional presentations quickly but don't have time to manually render every texture.

We've sold around 900+ sets on Etsy over the past couple years, and the feedback has been pretty consistent: "These actually work like they're supposed to."

One customer told me she showed a client presentation made with our floor plan brushes, and the client asked if she'd hired a professional renderer. She hadn't—she'd just used tools that didn't fight her.


The Honest Part: These Aren't Perfect

No digital brush will perfectly recreate every physical texture. If you're doing photorealistic architectural visualization, you probably need 3D rendering software.

But if you're creating:

  • Schematic floor plans
  • Interior design mood boards
  • Fabric and material swatches for client presentations
  • Technical drawings with decorative elements
  • Concept sketches that need to look polished

...then yeah, these will probably save you a lot of time.

And they come with commercial licenses, so you can use them in client work without worrying about licensing issues.


Start Here

If you're curious, our most popular set is the 142 Floor Plan Brushes kit. It's got architectural elements, furniture symbols, and texture brushes that work together.

Or if you do a lot of interior textile work, the 50 Curtain & Drapery set covers trimmings, fringes, and fabric textures.

Check out our most popular set

142 Floor Plan Brushes kit

All sets include:

  • Commercial license (use in client work)
  • Instant download
  • Video tutorials for the premium sets

And if something doesn't work the way you expected, just email me. I actually answer customer emails because, well, it's just me running this.


Questions?

Seriously, if you're not sure which set would work for your projects, shoot me an email: fedzianiovasviatlana@gmail.com

I'll usually respond within a day.


Thanks for reading this.

If you try the brushes, I'd love to hear what you think—what works, what doesn't, what you wish existed that doesn't yet.

— Sviatlana Fedzianiova

P.S. The 50 Trimming Brushes set is weirdly popular. I honestly didn't expect that one to take off, but apparently a lot of you need realistic grass and tree textures. Go figure.

 

 

 

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