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photoshop free Tutorials Retro Summer Poster Illustration



Step 1:

Open up a new 600X600px document and paste in an image of a girl. I used the great photo taken by ‘binababy12′, you can see the original here: http://www.sxc.hu/photo/931368. Make sure that her face is fully showing and that her fringe is also there. Resize and move the image to be in about the size/position shown below. Call this layer ‘girl photo’.

Step 2:

Create a new layer called ‘girl face’ and use the lasso tool to select around the girls face and ears. Be sure to select around the hair and fringe (‘bangs’ for any American readers). Then use the eye dropper tool to select an average shade of her face and fill in your selection.

Step 3:

Now hide your face layer and create a new layer called ‘girl eyes’. Select around one of her eyes using the lasso tool and then fill it with black. Then turn your layer’s visibility off and with the original photo showing through select the white parts of her eye (including the tiny white dot of her pupil). Then make your layer visible again and hit delete to delete this part of your black ‘girl eyes’ layer. Then create a new layer behind this layer but above your ‘girl face’ layer called ‘girl eyes white’ and you guessed, it use the lasso selection/fill tools to fill in the whites of her eyes. You can see some of the stages of this below as well as the result with ‘girl face’ layer made visible.

Step 4:

Now repeat this same technique. First create a new layer called ‘girl nostrils’ and use the selection, eye dropper and fill tools to fill in her nostrils. Then create a new layer behind this layer called ‘girl nose shadows’ and fill in the darker parts of her nose’s structure. Using the eye dropper tool for the nose’s shadows made it look too dark, so I reduced the ‘girl nose shadows’ layer’s opacity to around 30%. Then to give the nose a little more definition I create a new layer called ‘girl nose define’ which I positioned between my nostrils and nose shadows layers. I simply hid my current nose layers and face layer and then select the defining lines of the nose from the original photo. You can see the stages of this below:

Step 5:

Then I repeated the same technique for the lips, adding base color, defining lines and then shadows and highlights. You can see the stages of their construction below:

Step 6:

Now I repeat the same technique and add eyebrows and lines between her face and ears. With the right eyebrow I’m careful to avoid where her hair line is, and simply select the parts of her eyebrow showing around it. I reduce the opacity of both eyebrow and face/ear line layers until it looks right.

Step 7:

Ok so great! The face is done, now time for some funky hair. I create a new layer called ‘girl hair’ below my face layer. I select the pen tool, and make sure that ‘paths’ is the setting. Then I create anchor points spanning out sideways from about the height of the girls nose. I aim for a nice wavy outline, and am sure to make my path go beyond the sides/top of my document. Then I go to my paths, and choose ‘load path as a selection’. Once I have my selection I fill it with a gradient ranging from 270F53 to A723D2. This looks pretty cool, but I’m not happy with the shape. So I select my path tool again and change the shape, cutting out some cool stray hair parts.

Step 8:

Now create a box at the bottom half of your screen and fill it with a gradient ranging from 7A3700 to C77E29.

Step 9:

Now add some large, chunky text. Make sure that it’s white and that you move it so that it goes into your white background a little:

Step 10:

Now duplicate your text layer and move the duplicate below the original. Rasterize it, and go to image>adjustments>brightness/contrast. Reduce the brightness to -100 and up the contrast to 100 to make the text black. Then using your keyboard cursors move the layer 1px down and 1px right. Duplicate this layer and move it 1px down, 1px right again. Repeat this until you have a kind of 3d effect moving downwards/right at a 45 degree angle. Now merge all of these duplicate black text layers. Then go to layer blending options and give this merged layer a gradient overlay ranging from 2F1500 to 5E2A00.

Step 11:

Now move your gradient box and text layers right beneath all layers containing parts of your vector girl illustration. Paste a new layer above these layers that contains some kind of summery imagery. Go to image>adjustments>brightness/contrast and up the brightness by 85% and the contrast by 25%.

Step 12:

Now paste in a large paper texture, position it over your summer image. Then set the blend mode to overlay and merge the two layers.

Step 13:

Now hide this merged layer and select your ‘crazy hair is back’ text layer (the text layer not the 3d shadow layer. Rasterize the layer. Then select around the text using the magic wand tool. DO NOT select the inside spaces of your letters. Fill your selection with an obvious color (I chose red). Then reduce the layer’s opacity so that you can see the gradient box below and select the area of red above the gradient box, then delete it.

Step 14:

Now with your magic wand select the red area, as well as the area between letters (but not the spaces within the letters – such as the two gaps within B or the gap within A). Then with this selection in place hide your red fill layer and select your summer image layer. Hit delete. This should leave you with some really cool text that has the fill of your summer image, including the cool paper texture overlay.

Step 15:

The gradient on the hair isn’t really going with the rest of the image, so I apply a gradient overlay to the layer, ranging the gradient from 99CCF3 to 62B2EF.

Step 16:

Now the gradients in the hair, text shadow 3d area and gradient box at the bottom are looking a little sleek when compared to the paper texture in the rest of the poster. I paste in my paper texture just above the ‘girl hair’ layer, making sure to duplicate the layer and hide the original. Then I make the layer invisible, select around the hair shape using my magic wand tool and then select my paper layer again and hit delete to leave a paper image in the shape of the girl’s hair. Then I set the layer blending mode to overlay and reduce it’s opacity to 40%. I repeat the same technique for the 3d text shadow and gradient box. Remember that you kept your original paper texture layer, so you can duplicate this again and use the original/duplicate for these other two areas.

Step 17:

Now I want to give the hair area one last final bit of texture. I paste in a free image of a sunburst that I found on a new layer above my ‘paper texture hair’ layer. Then I desaturate it and cut it out to fit the hair shape using the steps shown previously in this tutorial. Finally I set the layer’s blend mode to ‘overlay’.

And We’re Done!

Here is the finished design! I hope that you enjoyed this tutorial and would love to know your thoughts on it.
photoshop free Tutorials Retro Summer Poster Illustration Reviewed by Unknown on 4:34 AM Rating: 5

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