At present, there are many tutorials for using Photoshop to make gouache, watercolor, and oil painting effects. To further embody Photoshop's powerful image processing capabilities, we will use Photoshop CS to process a peony picture and “draw†an antique Chinese painting.
Nmousewheel="return bbimg(this)" alt="" src="" class="lazy" original="" onload="" border="undefined" />
Figure 1 Extracting material
Nmousewheel="return bbimg(this)" alt="" src="" class="lazy" original="" onload="" border="undefined" />
Figure 2 Apply Splatter and Find Edge Filter
2. Copy the "Peony" layer three times, select the "Filter → Brush Stroke → Hatch" menu command for the first "Peony" layer, and make the parameters in the "Shadow" dialog box according to the size of the material. Set; for the second “Peony†layer, select the “Filter → Brush Stroke → Spill†menu command, and set the parameters according to the size of the material. The effect is shown in the figure; select “Filter†for the third “Peony†layer. "Mirror → Stylize → Search Edge" menu command, and then select "Image → Adjust → Desaturate" menu command, the layer is converted to a black and white image, as shown in Figure 2; next to the fourth "Peony" layer The Gaussian Blur filter is applied. The blur radius depends on the size of the graph. Generally, the value is relatively large.
Nmousewheel="return bbimg(this)" alt="" src="" class="lazy" original="" onload="" border="undefined" />
Figure 3 The last effect
3. Set the “Opacity†of the four “Peony†layers to 100, 67, 75, and 68 in order. The “Mixed Mode†is set to Soft Light, Hue, Linear Darkening, and Brightness. Finally, expand the canvas, and apply Cloud and Gaussian Blur. The watercolor paper filter creates the background texture and adjusts the background color by selecting the "Image → Adjustment → Hue / Saturation" menu command. The effect is shown in Figure 3.
1. Start Photoshop CS, open a peony picture, use the "Lasso", "magic bar" tool to extract the peony in the picture, delete other irrelevant background. As shown in Figure 1.