CStrauss opened this issue on May 30, 2009 · 5 posts
CStrauss posted Sat, 30 May 2009 at 11:00 AM
Hello,
I purchased some brushes inthe market place a while ago and never really got a chance to sit down and play with them until now. Basiclly they are are set of brushes used to create your own landscapes in photoshop, Grass, Mountins, Trees, Water, etc,
I'm just not really sure how to use them yet if anyone can give me some tips or have them and how they use them to add color, ect and start building a nice background scene.
spedler posted Sat, 30 May 2009 at 11:46 AM
Basically, this is just a plain purple background with several layers each containing an indvidual element - rocks, water, clouds, etc. None of the brushes is actually coloured, as I was aiming for a silhouette effect. It doesn't hold up as a standalone image but would work as a backdrop. So there aren't really any tips to using these brushes, just give it a try and see what you get. If I was doing this now I would also be using blending modes, maybe lighting effects, adjustment layers and so on, but this is just made from a series of layers set to normal and that's it.
Steve
CStrauss posted Sat, 30 May 2009 at 12:00 PM
Actually that is the set I bought, just never really used them yet, it was always easier to use a premade background or something but now i want to try use the brushes to make a nice detailed color background to fit my scene, and the tutorial that came with is vague in some steps I dont understand and so far what I have tried by folowing that doesnt produce real detailed results :(
specially i dont understand when it ask me to duplicate a layer then change the layer color to black or white? any help with that
spedler posted Sun, 31 May 2009 at 8:43 AM
Quote - specially i dont understand when it ask me to duplicate a layer then change the layer color to black or white? any help with that
What they mean by that is, duplicate the layer, lock the transparency, and fill it with black (or white). This replaces only the non-transparent pixels in that layer with the specified colour.
Steve
CStrauss posted Sun, 31 May 2009 at 8:49 AM
aaaaah cool deal thanks for explaining that to me :)