Mon, Nov 25, 3:50 PM CST

Renderosity Forums / Photoshop



Welcome to the Photoshop Forum

Forum Moderators: Wolfenshire Forum Coordinators: Anim8dtoon

Photoshop F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 21 7:35 am)

Our mission is to provide an open community and unique environment where anyone interested in learning more about Adobe Photoshop can share their experience and knowledge, post their work for review and critique by their peers, and learn new techniques while developing the skills that allow each individual to realize their own unique artistic vision. We do not limit this forum to any style of work, and we strongly encourage people of all levels and interests to participate.

Are you up to the challenge??
Sharpen your Photoshop skill with this monthly challenge...

 

Checkout the Renderosity MarketPlace - Your source for digital art content!

 



Subject: Probably simple for you Photoshop masters, but . . .


mercutio ( ) posted Tue, 10 July 2001 at 2:23 PM · edited Sun, 17 November 2024 at 9:31 PM

I have an image and I want to add a streak of lightning to it. I'm new to Photoshop and any help on ANY different methods of doing this would be appreciated. Also, is there any main Photoshop resource site? I'm using Photoshop 4.0 on a mac.


mercutio ( ) posted Tue, 10 July 2001 at 6:31 PM

never mind, I got it. www.actionxchange.com is wonderful!


Slynky ( ) posted Tue, 10 July 2001 at 10:11 PM

Hmm, if memory serves me correct, try doing a Render->Clouds , with blue and black i guess. Up the brightness and contrast royalle, and pick a piece of lighting out... dont quote me, photoshop is screy on me at themmoment, so i cant check


arallegro ( ) posted Tue, 10 July 2001 at 10:24 PM

You can use a Photoshop plugin called xenofex1.0 It has a lightning feature makes creating lighting patterns real easy. Hope you get on a Streak!!


cooey ( ) posted Wed, 18 July 2001 at 11:40 AM

The xenofex filter arallegro's talking about is okay. But you get random lightning patterns. What I'd do is draw a lightning bolt in the shape ( with a black fill) i like in a vector program like coreldraw, export it as tiff, open it in photoshop, copy it to my target image as a new layer, refill it in he color I want, add blurs, and basically fiddle around with it's opacity and maybe even add new layer copies of it for different effects. Play around with the layer blending options until you get the effect you want. Then, I go in with the dodge and burn tool on the background image to simulate the lightning's light effects on the clouds. It's pretty tedious but this way, you get the exact lightning streak you'd imagine. But then again, if random streaks are what you need, go the simpler route and get xenofex's filter. By rendering it on different layers first, you could probably get a streak that would serve your purpose. hope this could be of help.


Esgaroth ( ) posted Wed, 01 August 2001 at 5:39 AM

Alright hers how you do it. Start with a blank canvis. Use the gradient tool to create a black and white gradient. Click on filter>>render>>diference clouds. at this point press crt + f untill you find a pattern you like (the black bit is where the lightning will show). When your happy with the difference clouds then press crt + i (this inverts the image) then press ctr l (please note that is not a one but an L...) this opens the levels options window. Drag the middel up faceing arrow all the way to the right and you are left with your lightning. All you need to do now is change the colour (optional). Press crt + u (saturation) and in the window that pops up play around with the settings. Click the colorise check box if you want the lightning to be a colour. BTW if you move the saturation window somewhere where it allows you to see your image then you can change the colours in the saturation window and see what affect that it has. Hope this helps... if you have any questions then email me


Privacy Notice

This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.