Can I use Render>Clouds on the inside of a font only?
I want to leave the background untouched (if filled) or transparent.
I don't want to use the magic wand tool on the font, and then cut out shape from a clouds background. I need more detail than that would offer to get the effect.
I have the person and shadow on the proper background but I don't know how to get the clouds to fill in the bubble. I made a new layer and filled it with clouds but now it's telling me to go to the Path's Palette and create a selection from the path and mask the layer.
I dont really know what to call this thread as it is hard to explain what I want.... So lits say that I have a circle and I want my font to take shape and fill the inside of the circle, how would I go about doing this... I know that you can set a path and have the font foll the path but that I not what I want... What I am really asking is a fill but with the text that I am writing...
im writing text inside a shape and ive got that far ive even changed font sizes, now id like to write smaller text in the gaps between different font sizes. im using PSCS2.
I am making revision clouds on some record drawings. They come out all peachy, but when I save the file and reopen it, all of the wonderful little clouds change to jagged straight lines.
How to take the Castellar MT font and fill in the blank spaces in the letters with colour? I need to use this font because that's my company's font for their name and I'm trying to design a sign. I have used the blob brush, but I keep getting tiny little specks that look like they're not filled in.
I tried Nexus font (finally) and don't see why people have mentioned it. I don't like it and uninstalled it quickly.Which font manager do you think is better than Font Nav?
I know you can render clouds to your hearts delight... but are there any tutorials on how create realistic clouds, like cumulus, etc... I'm thinking of figuring it out and writing them myself if no one else has.
I have an image of clouds, I need the clouds to basically just have the white area showing and the darker areas to be transparent. Then I'm going to import it into illustrator --
I have a night-sky picture with a moon. I would like to make clouds on it, which would look really realistic, in dark parts they should be hardly visible or better said they should be dark, but they should be more bright over the moon. The moon shouldn't be covered whole. Can anybody help me with this? How to make such clouds?
I have intermediate level knowledge of Photoshop (CS5). I did a one-day course a couple of months ago, where the instructor told us how to put shapes/images/text in the sky and then make it so that it looked like cloud.
For example we wrote something like, "High in the Sky", then managed to make it look like it was like clouds in the sky that were spelling it out. We also dropped a picture of a plane or something then did the same thing, so there was a cloud shaped plane in the sky. The problem is I've completely forgotten how to do this but it so happens I need it for a work project I am doing.
I would like to cut out a cloud from one image and place it into the sky of another image. What is the best technique for preserving the transparent wispy edges like in the image below? The background is usually various gradient shades of blue.
I have this picture of the sky (wooooooooo). I figured out how to make the blue more vibrant using 'Selective Color'. But I cannot figure out how to make the clouds have more detail. My end production comes out rather flat.
This is the desired resualt im after, Mine is basically just white/gray clouds. as in my second picture below. I have tryed applying the filter(loads) but no changes really. My canvas is the same size as his.
it was made by combining some cool cloud picture with a starship ( that's the thing on the left ) and applying some contrast, brightness, color balance and overlaying to make this kind of color.
I'm dealing with a massive canvas (6 foot by 2 foot). I want to render clouds on the background and have the same effect as it does on a image say about 640 by 480. However when i render clouds on a large resolution you lots of little clouds which looks horrible. The same goes with water paper. If you zoom into a small area you can see the clouds, but when viewing the whole image it doesn't look nice.
How do i get the big clouds on a big resolution rather than lots of little small clouds.
I'm completely new to Photoshop (only started yesterday), but I've been playing with it and it's fun. My problem is that I've tried creating a picture, but the clouds I made don't exactly look much like clouds.
What I did to make them was to render clouds, then adjust levels to create cloud shapes, and transformed perspective. Then I set it to 25% opacity against a red/orange background. However, as you can see, there are no shadows on the clouds, and it looks kind of bad in general.
My question is: how would I go about shading the clouds? And if the clouds are extremely bad, how would I go about making more believable ones?
Also, is there anything else about my picture that I can/should improve?
when i render i do get a plain opaque film on top of my layer, but no clouds. i have made no changes to how i previously did it. 8 bit..rgb...everything is the same from how i was doing it yesterday. i can, however, open up a picture and clouds works just fine...but when i try it on a new fill or gradient layer all i get is that film.
i have even reinstalled the program but that did not work.
I'm creating an image for a webpage, I'ts a statue with a blue cloudy sky behind it. I'd like to smooth the edges of the image so that the sky blends nicely into the white web page.
I was hoping PS had something like a sponge that an artist would use on a canvas to diffuse any sharp edges at the edge of a painting.