Difficulty: Intermediate

Posted July 22nd, 2009 by

I found a very good tutorial related to make textured backgrounds. This will be very helpful to make fancy textures and cool backgrounds. Read it and enjoy.

Pre-requisites: Knowledge of the ‘layers palette’ and how to use the ‘move’ tool.

What I find best to start off with is a detailed photo of some sort, but make sure it holds a lot of interest. I’ve decided to use this one of shells:

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Step 1: The First Layer

Open up the shell image in Photoshop and right click the background layer. Select ‘duplicate’ (call it “RadialBlur” and hit ok). A new layer should appear.

Now change the layer’s mode to ‘multiply’ and decrease the opacity to around 75%.

difficulty02 Difficulty: Intermediate

Once you’ve done this, use the ‘move tool’ to move the layer around a little, until it looks good.

difficulty03 Difficulty: Intermediate

Apply a radial blur (filter >> blur >> radial blur) of about 20 in ‘best’ mode. It should look something like this:

difficulty04 Difficulty: Intermediate

Step 2: The Second Layer

Now, create another duplicate layer (name it “RadialBlur2″ like we did above). Right click the top layer (the blurred one you just created), and duplicate it.

Change the layer’s mode to color burn. You can move this image around a little to add effect.

Now, select you original layer and then select filter >> motion blur, entering 40 degrees for the angle, and 25 for the amount. It should look like this:

difficulty05 Difficulty: Intermediate

Step 3: Creating Highlights

Duplicate the background layer again (call it “highlights”), and drag this new layer to the top of the list. Then, change the layer mode to ‘luminosity’ and the opacity to around 40%. You’ll get something like this:

difficulty06 Difficulty: Intermediate

Step 4: Adjusting the Color

Just about finished — but it looks a bit strange with all those colors! Click the half white / half black circle at the bottom of the layers palette:

difficulty07 Difficulty: Intermediate
and select hue/saturation. Once the popup box appears, check the ‘colorize’ box and enter these settings:

  • Hue: 220
  • Saturation: 100
  • Lightness: +8

It should look pretty cool now, with lots of blue fades and highlights showing, a little like this:
difficulty08 Difficulty: Intermediate

To wrap up, cut out a nice ‘header sized’ piece. Apply a bit of text, maybe some grids and you should have a fine looking image! Here’s what I ended up with:

difficulty09 Difficulty: Intermediate



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