Infinite Pulp by True Grit Texture Supply is a specialized collection of paper texture templates designed to break digital artists away from static, fixed-size backgrounds. Unlike standard one-dimensional overlays, Infinite Pulp uses a multi-layer construction—including base textures and highlights—to ensure digital artwork retains a realistic, analog warmth without looking "flat" or "muddy". Key Features and Capabilities

Infinite Pulp was created to solve this problem. It is a set of high-resolution halftone texture patterns designed to give your digital artwork the gritty, tactile feel of mid-20th-century pulp comics and newspapers—without clogging up your computer with massive texture files.

The Concept of Infinite Pulp

The term "Infinite Pulp" refers to a highly versatile and adaptable material designed for use in 3D printers and other crafting tools. This material is engineered to mimic a wide range of textures, from the smoothness of glass to the roughness of stone, and can be adjusted or "tuned" during the printing process. The concept hinges on the ability to endlessly customize and combine different textures, effectively offering an infinite palette of tactile experiences.

Non-Destructive Editing: She could change the paper type at the very end of her project without altering her original drawing [2]. ✨ The Result

Adds instant "analog warmth" and depth to digital illustrations.

She had tried using traditional texture overlays before. However, they always presented the same problems: Moving or resizing the artwork ruined the texture scale. The files were massive and lagged her iPad. The edges looked repetitive and obviously digital. 🔬 The Infinite Pulp Solution

High Resolution: Hand-scanned at 1200dpi for incredible macro detail. 🎨 How It Works

However, True Grit has optimized these assets incredibly well. On a 2021 iPad Pro (or newer), Infinite Pulp runs at full resolution with no stuttering. The secret is their use of "Dynamic Grain" versus "Static Grain." Dynamic grain uses less RAM because it rebuilds the noise algorithmically rather than loading a massive PNG texture file.