Most textures and patterns don't look attractive in raw or when they are standalone, and these metallic ones Read more. Select the Elliptical Marquee tool M and draw a large oval over the centre of the background. Click to add a custom midtone point on the Curve line and drag downwards to darken the image:. Increase the Radius value as required to create a nice soft feather for the edges of the ellipse shape.
Check the Colorize tickbox and apply the following values: Hue 30 , Saturation 50 , Lightness Select the Text tool T and click on the canvas to create a Type Layer. Use the Options bar to set the required font size and colour and enter the required character.
Tip 2 years ago on Step Now drag the original text layer into a new layer. Drag it into the bottom of the layer window. Did you make this project? Share it with us! I Made It! I have tried using this filter but it remains greyed out. Can you help? Flame Generation comes to Photoshop CC! Adobe Photoshop. Filter 14 , Flames 2 , Scripted Patterns 6.
Is there a reason why the render flames option is grayed out in my dialogue box? Now we need to add more colors to the gradient. To do that, just click beneath the gradient bar anywhere along it.
You should have created another box. Click on that box and then change the color just like you did before. Keep doing that until you have 5 boxes with various colors in them, just like I have in the image above. You can then click on the little boxes and drag them into the proper position until they are spaced like I have them in the image. All of these are up to you.
Play around with the settings, see which blending style you like best, how dark you want the gradient to show up, etc. These are going to vary depending on your image, the background, which brush you used, which pattern you chose — any number of factors. As a last step, I took a round, soft brush that was set at a very low opacity and erased around the top edges of the flames to help them fade off into the black background.
Flames are fairly transparent, and they become moreso near the tops of the flame area. My flame now looks like this:. Still not as perfect as it could be, perhaps, but that goes a HUGE step toward helping create more realistic flames using my brushes and patterns. As you can see, it looks pretty good! This was made using the techniques listed here. This website uses cookies to improve your experience.
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