Cham wrote:What tricks are you using, with what filters, to do natural looking textures with many transparent parts ?
Well, it depends on your starting point... If you are starting off with an image where you have to remove colored areas, use the magic wand pick up everything you want to remove. This leaves you with very sharp edges. You can soften the edges several ways:
- duplicate the resulting image, and use gaussian blur on the bottom layer, then set the top AND bottom layer to 50% transparency (or another value that works), and merge the two. Then play with the contrast and sharpness filters to bring back detail in the areas that needs it.
- use the bevel/emboss/glow/drop shadow filters to soften the edges
If you are painting the image from scratch, just use a soft brush near the edges, and paint on a transparent layer
- you can also use the Clone Stamp brush to paint in areas. If the brush is set to a degree of transparency, you will get soft edges to up 100% transparency where you need it, while several strokes gives you increasingly less transparent areas. This is probably the easiest method, as it allows you to copy parts of an image onto a transparent surface with very good transparency control.
- rthorvald