This free set 1 pack contains 54 high-quality lens optical flares and stars brushes, 2700+ pixels size. Create professional visual effects in seconds!


The size of the file is high so drag and drop may not be work. To add the .abr file brush Edit>Preset>open preset manager then load it.

Just curious if the endless cries for a lens flare tool have actually been heard and acted upon. I've been waiting soooooooooooooo long for this essential feature, but all we get are worthless makeshift brushes.


Download Lens Flare Brushes For Photoshop


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Yes thankyou for the links. What Affinity Photo really needs is a fully customizable lens flare tool like Photoshop has. Wonderfully powerful, and extremely easy to use and customize. Brushes are a work-around at best, as they only offer one fixed solution per brush, and customizing them is not at all a fun task to undertake.

You have done everything you can to dance around putting in a real lens flare tool, which is what is desperately needed. I know brushes are there, but they are a totally sad and desperately inadequate answer to not adding in a much needed customizable lens flare tool.

I just did a full switch over to Affinity Photo from Adobe Photoshop. For the most part I am much happier using Affinity Photo. But the lack of lens flares does suck. Photoshop had them and that was great when they were needed, but for the most part I really don't need them in most of my work so I won't cry about it. Still it would be nice to have them back. Fortunately there is one solution to this that I think is acceptable. Gimp. Gimp has the lens flare filter native to it. Affinity Photo and Gimp are both able to read and export psd files perfectly fine, so it shouldn't be too hard to do most of your work in Affinity Photo, then save it as a PSD file, and reopen it in Gimp just to do the lens flare or use some of the other features of Gimp, then resave it again as a PSD and switch back to Affinity Photo. It's not the most convenient way to work, but it's effective. What's more is Gimp is free, so it's not like you're having to fork out more money for yet another art program.

Where is the lens flare tool? I mean seriously? Do you expect us to screw around wasting serious amounts of time with pathetic brushes when all you have to do is include a simple all-in-one lens flare tool for photo work?

I've never, used a lens flare brush because they are fixed and do not have the nuance and colour variegation (Chroma split) one would expect in a lens flare, if anything, I'd use an overlay so I have the colour information.

If an app is lacking a feature, I find a solution until such time as that feature is eventually included in the app. For me, that solution is Len Flare Studio (LFS) by Brainfever.

I'd like a sophisticated lens flare tool/filter in affinity but if it doesn't at least match or exceed LFS; for me, there is no point and Affinity would be hard-pressed to match the level of sophistication LFS has in producing the light effects that LFS can. It's a shame this app isn't plugin capable.

In my quest for everything "Lens Flarey", I found Befunky: and they have a great lens flare effect that is so easy to use you'd have to be a blob of jelly to get it wrong. So, as an example for Affinity Devs take a look at BeFunky, add something like that and you'd have at least two happy little affinity bunnies but I bet theres a few bunnies hiding in the hedgerow waiting for a lens flare effect tool.

This package includes 50 high resolution lens flares, provided both as color image overlays and as Photoshop brushes. With a wide variety of flare styles, this pack will give you the flares you need for composites .

Pack contains 42 hight quality lens optical flares and stars brushes, 1000 - 2500 px sizes, 300 dpi. Just 2 clicks for great result! Make your project, art, photo, illustration, flyer, etc. awesome in seconds.

Used in cinematography, anamorphic lenses capture a wider field of view without distortion. This is made possible, in part, by their square shape and horizontal lens elements. This shape is also what produces the distinct horizontal flares these lenses are known for. Director J. J. Abrams is well documented for his use of anamorphic lens flares. Look for them the next time you watch one of his films to see the effect in action.

Different equipment produces different results when it comes to lens flare. For example, a Nikon 85 mm lens renders lens flare differently than a Canon 16 mm-35 mm, just as a Sony mirrorless digital camera creates a different effect than a Leica film camera.

Zoom lenses produce more sun flare effects, as the increased number of lens elements amplifies the number of internal reflections within the camera, which cause lens flare. Wide-angle lenses, on the other hand, make light sources appear smaller because of the shorter focal length.

Aperture has a huge effect on the outcome of your flare. At wider apertures, the sun appears larger and more diffused and the flares are softer shapes. If you choose to shoot wide open, watch for the narrow depth of field and make sure your subject is in focus. Smaller f-stops such as f/16 let in less light, which allows the lens to pinpoint the sun as a small, star-like pattern.

This is a high resolution set of overlays and brushes. All of these brushes are photograph-based. The overlays are used for multi-colored flare effects. The brushes are used for single color flare effects.

For many manufacturers, flare is on that list of faults. Coatings are added to help reduce and at times all but eliminate those internal reflections. A lens with heavy flare suppression can be pointed directly at the sun and yet only have a short bloom of light concentrated only around the light source.

My new set of Lens Flare Brushes contains 11 glow brushes perfect for your Photoshop designs. You can use a lens flare brush in so many creative ways. For example use these brushes to enhance your photos or to create abstract artworks in Photoshop.

The Lens Flare Effect is caused by a very bright light sources which produces several starbursts, rings, or circles in a row across the image. Most commonly, this occurs when shooting into the sun. This beautiful light effect can be added to any image in Photoshop, as an after effect, with Render Filters. In fact my brushes are made using the lens flare filter so they should look very nice.

To simulate a lens flare for example the sun lens flare, you can use one of my brushes that will look realistic on your images.These free brushes were created using the Photoshop Lens Flare filter that you can find in the Render category menu.All the 11 brushes have high resolution of around 1300 px so you can easily integrate them in your designs. If you use them I willbe happy to see the result so upload your work at the comments section!

The ABR file contains 11 lens flare brushes. The file was made with Photoshop CS4 so if you have this PS version or a higher versions, this file will probably workjust fine. These lens flare brushes can be downloaded by all our registered users. They are free for personal and commercialuse with attribution with a link back to our blog. The redistribution/selling this file on other websites is not allowed. 2351a5e196

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