While playing this program, the brush that stood out the most prominently to me was the circle brush because it was the brush that came along with an auditory and tactile experience. Somehow, the little disks that were expelled as I moved the brush across the screen reminded me of thin and colorful plastic disks from back when I was in elementary school. Spreading them across the desk would give a slight click click noise along with a light uneven rolling sensation underneath my fingertips. Every time the gray disks would roll out under the cursor, I would recall this old memory. Another brush that gave me a tactile sensory experience was the concentric circle brush. For some reason, it would make me think of concentric circles drawn in the sands of zen gardens. When I would drag the cursor across the screen, I felt the experience of dragging an object through sand and a rippling granular sensation of moving sand particles. To recreate these sensations in real life, I would just return back to the objects that I thought of when using these brushes, like the plastic chips and the sand art. The final tool I’d like to mention is the triangle tool. Unlike the other tools mentioned, it’s so random in its size, attributes, and colors. The speed in which the triangles come out differ as well. This is the brush where I would say has a life of its own because it’s so unpredictable compared to the other brushes within the program.