
The Preview WindowĮven though Photoshop gives us a live preview of the oil painting effect within the image itself, most images these days are too big to fit entirely on the screen at their actual size. The new Oil Paint filter dialog box in Photoshop CC. Since the Oil Paint filter was only recently added back to Photoshop CC, you'll want to make sure that your copy is up to date before you continue, otherwise the filter may not be available.
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And while a Photoshopped oil painting effect may not fool any professional art dealers or ever hang on a gallery wall, turning one of your photos into an oil painting is still lots of fun, and the results can look very impressive. But thanks to Photoshop and its Oil Paint filter, I don't have to be! I can still pretend I'm the next Vincent van Gogh without a shred of real-world evidence to support it.

And if you saw anything I've tried to paint, you'd be the second to admit I'm not a painter. Now, I'll be the first to admit that I'm not a painter. Thankfully, as of the November 2015 Creative Cloud updates, the Oil Paint filter is back! And even though it's essentially the same filter that it was back in CS6 (which isn't a bad thing), the CC version now sports a much smaller, less intimidating dialog box that makes using it seem easier than ever. But for whatever reason, it disappeared in the initial release of Photoshop CC.

The Oil Paint filter was first introduced as an official filter in Photoshop CS6.
