I have searched all over for a tute or techinique for making waves and realistic water in PS. And to show waves breaking on the bow of a ship as it passes through the water, but I can't seem to find anything. I have tried it myself a hundred time without much sucsess. Can anyone point me in the right direction?
i'm trying to create is an image that consists of numerous lines that are waves, alternating between two different colors,
i've created an image in photoshop of vertical grey lines spaced evenly with white in between each. What i then did was use the liquify filter and drag across the entire image to create peaks, then i did it in the opposite direction a little lower to create a sort of wave.
i want to make the curves reall realistic like eletricity u know the bleu color with white in it
so i want the waves to begin at an image as AC current then go tru the text like DC current and again go out of the text as AC current but with the color of electricity
i have an image written on it ALL ELECTRONICS REPAIR now i want the curves go tru the (ALL)
This may look like a simple effect to the pros, but im no sure how to achieve it in PS. Im designing a web page and i like designs with flowing curves ( I think it looks cool & modern looking) but Im not sure how to make these effects in PS.
How can I make beautiful curves with nice colours like these?
I have a blue layer that I want to put satin waves in. Basically waves like a flag but the material should be satin causing light and dark waves in the material.
I want to make a fountain that has water jets that cause ripples when they hit the water. I have tried the basic reactor water and Pflow setup, as well as super spray, but neither seem to work. Is there any way to accomplish this without "faking" it by doing something creative with the water's texture?
Any else out there illustrating custom drop shadows may have encountered this. If I do a hard drop shadow ro in RGB does not happen as much. When I convert to cmyk happens more.
Have had some success by rather than going form 0,0,0,0, to 1,1,1,1,, I curve correct to from 0,0,0,0 to 0001 then to 1,0,0,1. I do not think this is a monitor collaboration issue, as have had this problem forever on so many different systems.
Below is a screenshot (i darkened the right half so you could see better).
I tried many different techniques all same result. Brushing with a 0% hard large brushgaussian blurring default black on a layer set to 11% opacity running all the blurs over and over again using eraser set to 0% hard adn large brush feathering a selection spatter filter in rgb mode, then covert to cmykadding noise .
I'd really like to create an animated shadow cast down on the ocean floor by the waves above. That nice ripply effect where the light peaks through the waves onto the sand below. I need it to animate too, I think that will be very hard.
I can't post links at the moment but a simple Google image search of "stingray ocean floor" should yield some nice examples. I can't actually find any tutorials similar enough to adapt for this purpose. (I'd like to have the light ripples as the transparent part, and the shadows varying shade of grey to black)
A long long time ago I saw a tutorial on a site that has disappeared it was called 'Ray of Light 2' on www.fundy.net. Now I have gone looking for the tutorial again and cannot find it anywhere unfortunately.
So on that note I was wondering if anybody knew of some good techniques or tutorial to create a light burst behind text/shapes. Now being the awkward git that I am heehee, I am looking for something as realistic as possible.
Okay, I've spent too much time in google looking for a site with tutorials or something I can learn to CG engough so that I can make this hand look better than it does...
I thought as a nice gesture, I would write a little tutorial here on understanding the many faces of colors, and how they are used online and in print. RGB. It stands for Red, Green, Blue; the 3 colors used in combination to produce every color on your computer screen. On your computer there are 256 shades of each of these colors.
I just spent a week coding this nice little tutorial script. Currently i have very few tutorials, but with your help i am hoping to have more. There is no requirement to link to me. Just upload a 40x40 icon, and the URL to your tutorial and your done!
My hope is to have a nice little spot for people to come for photoshop tutorials. It's more like a portal than anything. Personally I love photoshop myself, and would love to see my site grow. But this isnt possible without you guys' help.
I'm copying some vector art (monochromatic flats) from Illustrator and pasting into Photoshop as Smart Object. I am making selections from the flats to create individual paths to color however the edges aren't lining up. I end up with gaps between the edges and the lines are jagged.
Can someone please explain anti-aliasing? I am following a few video tutorials, one is saying turn it on and the other says to turn it off.
2) Take pencil tool and draw a straight line of 1 pixel, then draw another 31 pixels lower The color is 102/102/126
3) Take the magic wand and select the part between the two lines.
4) Set forground color to 168/167/191 and background color to white
5) Take gradient tool, hold shift, move from top to bottom and release your mouse
6) Deselect and make a new selection. Make it 3 pixels high and move it so you got the dark blue line and one light blue line above your selection.
(close-up)
7) Take the gradient tool again, take the gradient that sais foreground to transparent and make a gradient in the selection.
8) Take pencil tool again. Take color 188/189/205 and draw a line above the bottom blue line Take color 228/227/227 and draw another line above the one you just drew.
(close-up)
Now if you want some color variations just go to Image>Adjustments>Hue/Saturation and play with the settings.
Anyone happen to know of a good "melting film" tutorial? I'm looking for a photoshop version of what we've all probably seen on tv. Film strip stopping and getting melted by the projector bulb.
While attempting a tutorial out of Scott Kelby's "Down and Dirty Tricks" for Photoshop CS, I could not get the History Brush to operate. When I clicked on it and touched on the canvas all I got was a 'No Entry' sign and a messeage that read "Could not use History Brush because current canvas size does not match that of history state."
I was looking for displacement map tutorials through Google and came across a listing that showed a man coming through a wallpaper like background. The link was a photoshopgurus.info address but when I attempted to follow the link I received your "typewriter" error page. Will this tutorial be available in the future?
I have recently been put in charge of redesigning an auto trade magazine. Carbon fiber is a very popular material for use in cars and I am wanting to do a header one of the sections with a carbon fiber graphic. All the tutorials I have found don't look that great when printed at 300 dpi at 2 inches tall. The carbon fiber on this image however is amazing looking.