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Photoshop F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 04 10:41 pm)
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Attached Link: http://www.photoshopcafe.com/tutorials/waterdrops/waterdrops.htm
Tut for water drops on paper, can be used for blood aswellI recently found out (just take a look at ToxicAngel's postwork), that these kind of things require a rather old fashioned asset that is not in the menus of Photoshop. Just plain painting skills. Knowledge of how to paint something like glass. I once looked over the shoulder of someone's father, who made still lives. He painted a photorealistic glass with some five strokes of white and black over a completed background. Fluids tend to be little more than refraction and reflection. And indeed, that is very hard to accomplish. The teardrop tutorial is a good example by the way. It is just shadows and hightlights, as I recall. And those skills (Which I do not claim at all, incidentally).
Rain Drops Tutorial I won't mention the "water drops" and "drip" filter that Eye Candy 4000 has retrocity. hehehe
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Okay, I've done many things in Photoshop and enjoyed trying and learning differnt ways of going about these things...but one thing I cannot get done is blood or slime...whatever a running or dried liquid would be on a photo. Any suggestions? Jordan