free photoshop tutorials






Sunday, June 15, 2008

Photoshop Ice Text Tutorial

Allow KingPhotoshop.com to teach how to create ice text in Photoshop right now. All you have to do is follow the simple steps below and you're on your way to creating eye-catching, freezing ice text!
Photoshop Ice Text Tutorial Step 1: Open a new document and make the background black. Make the document large enough so that your text will have good space between it and the edges of the image on all sides. Now set white as your foreground color and black as your background color by hitting D then hitting X. Create a new layer by hitting Shift + Ctrl + Alt + N (Mac: Shift+Command+Option+N). Use the Text Tool to add your text in white.
Photoshop Ice Text Tutorial Step 2: Make sure the text layer is still active, and hold Ctrl (Command), then click the text layer in the Layers palette to make it a selection. Go to Filter>Noise>Add Noise. Next, click OK to the pop-up asking you if you want to rasterize. Choose 150% and Uniform for the settings. Hit Ctrl + D (Command+D) to deselect.
Photoshop Ice Text Tutorial Step 3: Now go to Filter>Pixelate>Crystalize and choose Cell Size 3. After that, go to Filter>Stylize>Find Edges. Hit Ctrl + I (Command+I) to inverse the colors.
Photoshop Ice Text Tutorial Step 4: Go to Edit>Transform>Rotate 90 CW. Then, Filter>Blur>Gaussian Blur and choose 0.8 for the Radius. Next, you need to go to Filter>Stylize>Wind and choose "Wind" and "From the Right". If the icicles-to-be are getting close to the left side, move your text over to the right a bit. Run the same wind filter a second time and then go Edit>Fade Wind. Move the Opacity slider to suite your preference. With larger text, 100% might be ok, but in this example, we decreased the Opacity to 80%.
Photoshop Ice Text Tutorial Step 5: Flip your text back around by going to Edit>Transform>Rotate 90 CCW. Create a new layer by hitting Shift+Ctrl+Alt+N (Shift+Command+Option+N). Select a light blue color you'd like to accent your ice with as you foreground color (I picked #1A9BFF). Fill the new layer with that color by hitting Alt+Backspace (Option+Delete). Hold Alt (Option) and click between the blue layer and the text layer in the Layers Palette. The cursor should turn to into a symbol with two circles when you have it in the right place. With the blue layer still selected, go to the left drop-down menu above and change its Blending Mode to Overlay. Then, decrease the Opacity slider to suite your taste. (I opted for 90% in the example).
Photoshop Ice Text Tutorial Step 6: Now for the moderately tricky part. Create another new layer by hitting Shift+Ctrl+Alt+N (Shift+Command+Option+N). Hold Ctrl (Command) and click the layer with your text to load it as a selection. Fill the layer selection with a dark blue (I used #000761). Hit Ctrl+D (Command+D) to deselect. Set white as your background color. Go to Filter>Artistic>Neon Glow. This part varies heavily with what the size and style of your text. Choose a middle blue color (I picked #002BD0). Move the Glow Size to roughly -8 and Glow Brightness to roughly 19.
Photoshop Ice Text Tutorial Step 7: Go to Filter>Plastic Wrap and change the settings to your preference (I used Highlight Strength 8, Detail 14, Smoothness 7). In the Layers Palette, change the Blending Mode to Pin Light. If you wish to make it more blue, you can do the same thing as in Step 5: make a new layer, fill it with a darker blue (I chose #001E91), hold Alt (Option) and click between the the layer and the one beneath it, change the Blending Mode to Overlay, and adjust the Opacity as you see fit. (I made it 18%).
Photoshop Ice Text Tutorial Step 8: To finish it off, set white as you foreground color and grab the Paint Brush tool. In the Brush selector at the top, find the sparkle brushes that look like the ones I used to the left. You may have to load the Assorted Brushes.abr file that has these brushes. It should be located in a folder similar to C:\Adobe\Photoshop 7\Presets\Brushes\. Create a new layer on top and apply the brushes to a few highlighted areas near the top of your text. Brr...that's it...I've got to put a coat on.
We've now completed the free photoshop ice text tutorial from KingPhotoshop.com. Feel free to bookmark our site and keep checking back for free adobe photoshop tutorials.

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Saturday, June 14, 2008

How to Record an Action in Adobe Photoshop CS3

Ever wish you could simply press a button or two in order to preform a function in Photoshop? Now you can! In this tutorial, we will learn how to record an action in Adobe Photoshop. We will do this by recording a "create new layer" action, which will allow us to create a new layer at the push of a button!
Photoshop New Document Step 1: Open a new document in Adobe Photoshop by clicking "File" then "New", or by simply pressing ctrl + n on your keyboard.
Photoshop Actions Step 2: Open your actions panel by clicking on "Window" then "Actions". This step will lead to the panel where we record any and all actions in Adobe Photoshop.
Adobe Photoshop Actions Step 3: Get a feel for your actions panel. Expand it to your preference and make sure it stays visible.
Create New Action Step 4: Click the "Create new action" button down on the lower right of your actions panel.
Photoshop New Action Step 5: Name your action something like "Create New Layer", and then assign a shortcut key to your new action. Leave the color set to none and the actions set to "default".
Photoshop New Layer Step 6: Create a new layer by going to "layer", and then clicking on "new", and then clicking on "layer". You can also press ctrl + shift + n to perform this function.
Adobe Photoshop New Layer Step 7: Leave the "new layer" settings at default and press ok.
Create Action in Photoshop Step 8: Click the "stop" button in your actions panel.
Photoshop Save Workspace Step 9: Save your workspace by pressing "window", then "workspace", then "save workspace". This will ensure that your recorded actions are embedded into your Adobe Photoshop workspace. Name your workspace when prompted, and you're all set.
That's all there is to it! Feel free to record all kinds of different functions such as document aligning, pen tool tracing, and layer fills...just to name a few! Keep checking back to KingPhotoshop.com and make sure to add us to your favorite bookmarking websites today.

 

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Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Free Online Photoshop Tutorials

Welcome to KingPhotoshop.com! The purpose of this site is to provide you with everything you need to know about Adobe Photoshop. I will also be providing useful products and links along the way. My tutorials will consist of a video as well as a text-based description of the methods. In some tutorials I will use old versions of Photoshop such as version 7.0, and in other tutorials I will use Adobe Photoshop CS3. Feel free to contact me and leave some comments all over this site. The key is to build a solid community so we can all teach each other great new things about Adobe Photoshop.

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