Tutorial: Page (1) of 4 - 08/25/03 Email this story to a friend. email article Print this page (Article printing at MyDmn.com).print page facebook
Photoshop Painting Techniques: Hair and Fur Using advanced Paint Engine functions to create custom effects By Dave Nagel If you haven't already, you will at some point in your design career be forced to composite hair or fur into a project. The specific reason isn't important. But how are you going to do it? Use a plugin? Not any of the ones I've seen. Copy and paste hair from another image? Too much of a pain, what with the complex masking and color matching. So what will you do, paint the hair follicle by follicle? Absolutely. But it isn't anywhere near as time-consuming as it sounds. With the tools available in the Photoshop 7 Paint Engine, you can generate hair and fur with as much detail as you like in almost no time at all.

In the olden days, there weren't any really great ways to create hair and fur effects. But Photoshop 7 will allow you to design your hair strand by strand and generate a highly complex effect with little effort. The example below took maybe a half hour from shoot to final composite.



This kind of scraggly beard style isn't the only effect you can create with this technique, but it is a good starting point for getting you to understand how something like this can work in Photoshop 7.



Creating your brush tip and setting dynamics
If you're not familiar at all with Photoshop 7's Paint Engine, this tutorial is going to give you a little insight that will make you wonder how you ever got along without it. If you don't want to create this brush yourself, you can wait until I post my collection of hair and fur brushes next week. But for the more adventurous among you, here's how you do it.

To begin with this particular example, we first need to create a new brush tip shape. Create a new document with a transparent background. Select a dark gray color swatch, and then switch to the Brush tool and select one of the preset brushes--the "Hard Round 3 Pixels" brush in this case.



Draw some squiggly lines that overlap. Make sure you make at least one of the lines fairly long, and be sure to make them curly. If you have a pressure-sensitive tablet, vary the stroke width by easing off the pen. Getting this brush tip shape just right may tale a little time, but you will get there with just a few tries. Here's the squiggle I've drawn for this example, and it's the only one I've used in creating the sample image above.



Now choose Edit > Define Brush, and give your brush a name. Now your custom brush is stored in the Brushes palette. Open it up and select the new brush (if it isn't already selected) to get a gander at it.




Page: 1 2 3 4 Next Page


Related Sites: Creative Mac ,   Digital Producer ,   Hollywood Industry ,   Digital Video Editing ,   Siggraph News ,   Corporate Media News ,   Digital Media Designer ,   Digital Post Production ,   Presentation Master ,   Oceania ,   MacAnimationPro ,   PhotoShop
Related Newsletter: Tutorial Finder

DMO TEXT LINKS
(Click here to place a textlink on this site)

Vegas Pro 8 + Free Vegas Seminar Series
Master classes for cutting-edge video production
A $100 value free with purchase
CLICK HERE!!!

HOT THREADS on DMN Forums
Content-type: text/html  Rss  Add to Google Reader or
Homepage    Add to My AOL  Add to Excite MIX  Subscribe in
NewsGator Online 
Real-Time - what users are saying - Right Now!
    • Re: Acid Pro 7 loops question • JohnnyRoy
    • Re: Rendering to .avi files • yigalsela
Content Insider #148 - The iGen
NO...Doesn't have a thing to do with "that" smartphone...or "that" store...or "that" tablet. It's the next generation. Kids and we mean little kids. That's what today's products are being designed for/targeted at. You happen to buy one...fine. Watch a little, little kid pick up a smartphone. He/she just uses it. They've come pre-wired and we're still trying to figure out how to IM. It's the IGen. They want it instantly. They want to use it instantly. They expect their photos, their video, their music, their stuff immediately when/where/how they want it. Read More
Social Media #2
Number two in a series of articles to plainly explain what organizations need to consider and carry out in today's social media. As the online communities increase in size, number, character; companies will refine their activities to develop "word of mouth equity" that can be used to strengthen their understanding of the customer's wants/needs (present/future), produce sales, blunt the effect of cheap store brands compared to name brands and draw upon when problems, issues arise. Read More
E3 2010: Eyes on the Floor
While nothing tops your very first E3 experience, every year comes with new surprises around every turn while exploring the booths. There were still hundreds of people in view at all times of the day, from exhibitors to booth babes and even security. It's overwhelming even before the press meetings! Read More
Social Media #1
The reach of the Internet has opened the door for companies to be in direct touch with millions of individuals who want to obtain information and discuss your company, products, services and your capabilities. They have thousands of online outlets to research virtually anything - and anyone - who exists on the planet. The challenge for companies is how to participate with these people, win them over or neutralize their issues. Read More
@ Copyright, 2010 Digital Media Online, All Rights Reserved