I am trying to create an effect that will make letters appear to have been burned into wood - I created a wooden board in photoshop with the help of EyeCandy 4000, found the right color and texture for the lettering, but I cannot get the letters to appear burnt INTO the wood. Used EyeCandy's "bevel boss" but now matter how I manipulate the curve, it always looks like the letters are on top of, instead of burned into, the background.
I've got text superimposed on a photo of wood in ID (Text was added in ID.) Client wants the text to look like it's engraved in the wood. I don't think I can do this in ID.
Many years ago I did something similar in PS with text on a marble background, and it took many steps to accomplish.
What's the best way to do the wood engraving? I'd like to avoid having to go through zillions of steps, because I anticipate changes in the project.
I am trying to create a logo that looks like it is branded into a piece of wood. I created my logo, powerclipped a darker image of the wood inside, created an embossing effect with a lighter and darker version offset from the main logo. Now I would like to "roughen" it up a bit to look more natural - following the woodgrain, and more "burnt in".
I've just taken this pic, and I would like to give it that extra something by adding borders...kind of like burnt in edges. But the thing is that I hate the burn in tool in Photoshop...the texture is veru unnatural.
I am trying to do a realistic burnt edge effect, I have looked at all the tutorials I could find. But they just seem to come out... Alright.
Anyone have any examples of one and tips they used to create it or links or anything that might help? Driving me insane trying to do this and im not getting very far with it..
I have a picture that I want to dull in selected points as they have burnt out the highlights slightly but I'm not sure which function I should be using.
I have some images that I would like to add this effect to.
I am also looking for some information on making a shiny metal background for a website. I have tried many different tutorials, but have yet to find what I am looking for. I want to reproduce a Silver background with a high gloss effect.
I am almost a begginer with PS7, and circumstances require me to use a feature asap before my instruction book arrives!
I make 360 panoramas, and I have a series of .jpg digital pictures taken inside, some of which contain 'burnt out' windows. I have however also taken an identical picture exposing correctly for the outside lighting.
I wish to replace the 'burnt out' windows with the properly exposed ones.
I have got as far as cropping the outside shot and placing it underneath the inside shot and using the eraser to make it show through. It seems to work quite well, but my problem is the saved file size. The originals are approx 1.5Mb, but after doing the above, the file size goes beyond double the original .. which I can't seem to fathom. I don't understand why this should be so, and when it will come to stitching the 12 images, they need to be roughly the same file size (and exact dimensions).
In the past I was able to download a slideshow of photos that was burnt to a dvd and play it on the TV with the use of the dvd player.I have upgraded to windows 7 home premium .I have purchased VIDEOSTUDIO PRO 5 X..I have burnt a DVD-RW and watched it on my computer but it will not work on the DVD player or TV. Should I be able to do this with my VIDEO STUDIO X5? do I have to buy more software.
I have burnt a DVD from an .mpg file. The file itself play fine in VSX2PRO as well as computer media players. The burnt DVD plays fine on the computer as well.
When I play it on a DVD player & TV I lose about 6 or 7 percent of the picture edges all the way round. I have tried it in 3 different DVD player/TV combinations with same results.
I have tried burning with VS itself & Nero - same results. It is relevant as the file is of still with text that goes very close to the edge.
I'm considering making a website to market and sell some of the woodworking products I have been building, cabinets and pieces of furniture, things like that. I'm thinking a nice wood graing background or look and feel would be nice, maybe with some screw heads for buttons and things like that. I'm just curious if anyone has any tips or tutorials that they've seen on creating a realistic looking wood grain pattern. I'm sure I'll eventually come up with something acceptable, but why re-invent the wheel if someone has already come up with it!
Trying to redo a disc I did in 2006 on a previous program. When I go to capture and then import, it shows 2 files, title and chapter. They are both the exact same thing? Is there any particular reason for this?
I use a light box to take pictures of my wood art items. The walls of the light box are made from foam core boards and light wooden frame for increased stability. Even though I can place a poster board for background color inside the light box and curve it up the back to create a seamless surrounding, parts of the corners may get in the picture.
I have recently purchased Photoshop Elements 11 and am in the learning curve. Can I touch up the areas of the light box corners that show up in the photo? This is probably done in Editor. I have used another "old" editor Microsoft Picture It! Publishing Platinum 2001 for years where I would use paint to touch up the background or cover up something in the background. But it was difficult to get the background colors to match even if the color was white.
Here are some of our samples. We are just starting out. We would like to know if these would be considered professional enough? we aren't using global illumination because our computer can't handle that setting.
Also, see the wood texture? How to improve the wood texture? i think it looks great, we just need to make the grain more subtle.
dummy r5.jpgmachined parts one no contact.jpgsalt and pepper shaker no contact.jpggears no contact.jpg
I have designed a wooden bracing system and added the wood material properties for the part in Inventor 2012. My question is this - does Inventor have the ability to add stainless steel wood screws to the assembly to make this a 'real world' situation prior to me doing a stress analysis on it ? Something similar to the bolted connections for metal assemblys but for screws in wood is what I'm looking for.
Autodesk Inventor Professional 2013 SP2 64-Bit Edition Windows 7 HP Z400, Intel Xeon W3550 3.07GHz 12.0GB RAM, ATI FirePro V4800 (FireGL)
How do you create a dynamic wood screw block with lookup functinality so that you can select, say, 20mm, 25mm, 30mm screws ect. ect., and both the length and threads change acordingly? Got as far as a lookup for the length with a stretch action but cant get the threads to array acordingly!
Where I could download a wood flooring hatch pattern. Not a parquet, but wood flooring that looks almost like plain lines, but interrupted randomly by a perpendicular line (which would be where the boards butt up against each other.