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Tuesday 30 August 2011

Fantasy Art Photopshop Tutorial – Plasma in the Lake in photoshop updates

This tutorial was originally posted on loreleiweb.com but due to technical reasons moved to pswish.com. The tutorial remains a copyright property of Lorelei (me!)
The requests for Fantasy Art tutorials are enormous, I still get emails and Pms from people asking to do more Fantasy Art tuts, so here is one more, called “Plasma” (Star, not the TV!) which I hope you’d enjoy.

1. Make a new canvas, we used 600*480 px here, but the size is of course optional.

2. Select the Gradient Tool, using two shades of blue (see below), fill your canvas, so that the darker colour will be on top.
http://loreleiwebdesign.com/wp-content/uploads/HLIC/eda9bf1fac802b517e57524bf45c3022.jpg

3. Take a photo of a girl. Traditionally I am using Becca‘s photo from her Deviant Art account, but you can replace her with any semi-sitting figure of your choice. Crop the figure and paste her unto your canvas. In needed, resize her so that she will fit in.

4. To get rid of the visible crappy cropping, and to give the girl more emphasis, add blueish glow to her by going to Layer >> Layer Styles >> Outer Glow and applying the following settings:
http://loreleiwebdesign.com/wp-content/uploads/HLIC/b135eb0e83de1c64e0ac69c6f84a3a6f.jpg
This is what you would get:

5. Make a new Layer. Make sure your primarily and secondary colours are black and white. Go to Filter >> Render >> Clouds
http://loreleiwebdesign.com/wp-content/uploads/HLIC/d484e43dafea5cd402d994600312c5cb.jpg
And, if needed apply the clouds effect a several times to achieve the desired randomly “clouded” effect.

6. Reduce the opacity of the layer to semi-visible.
http://loreleiwebdesign.com/wp-content/uploads/HLIC/d5de0439e09da49491ecffc8890eb01d.jpg
7. Press Ctrl+T for free transform, and then right mouse click and “Scew”. Drag the left corner of the clouds layer, as shown on the illustration below:

Press “Enter” when you are done, then Ctrl + D to deselect the layer.
8. Duplicate the clouds layer. Select the upper layer and go to Edit >> Transform >> Flip Horizontal.

9. Select the girl’s layer from layers panel and drag it to the top, so that it would be your utmost upper layer.

Remember to remove the parts where layers turn to be on top of one another.
10. Take a photo of a lake with water circles. We used this one from Digital Free Photo, but again – this is optional.
Paste the layer unto your composition, so that the circles in the water will be “around” the girls or your main figure.

11. Using the Eraser Tool, remove the lower part of the girl’s layer, so create the illusion as if she is really sitting inside the water and the water circles are “from” her.

12. Set lake’s layer blending options to Luminosity.

13. Drag the Layers of the clouds on top of the water later and using eraser tool with soft edge (100px) remove the sharp parts, so that only the “steaming” clouds will remain, no edges.

14. Now to the hard bit – creating the plasma cycles.
Make a new layer (this is important) and place it on top of all the others.
15 Using the Elliptical Marquee tool, draw and ellipse. While the ellipse on the new layer is selected, Right-mouse-click and choose “stroke”. Apply the settlings below for the stroke effect:

16. Press Ctrl + T to free transform, and then right-mouse-click >> Prospective. Try to distort the round layer you have to it would look like the line is surrounding or flowing around the girl.
http://loreleiwebdesign.com/wp-content/uploads/HLIC/94c651aa8cbab5cafc511c65f08b9b89.jpg
17. Using the Eraser tool with big soft edge, remove the “farther” part of the round, behind her head, like this:

18. While this layer is selected, go to Layer >> Layer styles >> Outter glow and apply the following glow settlings:

http://loreleiwebdesign.com/wp-content/uploads/HLIC/5ccb93943e152d64bae67a3ac413be53.jpg
19. Duplicate the layer a several times and each time transform the round using the prospective settlings, so that the circles chaotically surround the main figure’s body.
http://loreleiwebdesign.com/wp-content/uploads/HLIC/4f1719304fa2facec5b724154f5f26d9.jpg
20. Remember to leave the “front” part of the circle visible and erase the “back” part of it. This is more or less what you should have by now:photoshop updates
http://loreleiwebdesign.com/wp-content/uploads/HLIC/6f7804b7e1f3030de5aa8b2ac7e508fa.jpg
21. Flatten the Layer.
22. Go to Image >> Adjustments >> Levels and apply the following settlings to give the image an overall bluish hue:
http://loreleiwebdesign.com/wp-content/uploads/HLIC/ce7dca14b19a189341d7bccc221e9a73.jpg
http://loreleiwebdesign.com/wp-content/uploads/HLIC/9eab6f697ab4ee216b3432bb7d09a926.jpg
23. Duplicate the layer.
24. While the upper layer is selected (and your background colour in the palette is set to white), go to Filter >> Distort >> Diffuse Glow and apply these glow settings.photoshop updates

25. Reduce the opacity of the “glowing layer” to 20% (or less, depends on your image).
26. Flatten the layer again to merge both layers into one.
27. Using some star brushes (download free on deviant Art resources page), apply the stars chaotically around and allover the glowing cycles.

28. Select the background layer (the artwork, not the stars) and to to Renters >> Lightening effect, apply the following spot light effect twice.photoshop updates

29. Get back to Stars layer, and go to Layer >> Layer Styles >> Outer Glow, and add the following glow using white #ffffff colour.

30. Duplicate the stars layer.
31. Go to Filter >> Blur >> Radial Blur and apply these settings.

You may choose to reduce the opacity of this layer if you feel the rounded blurred effect is too strong. That’s it, your artwork is ready:

Download my poorly cropped Render:






sr:loreleiwebdesign

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