In this tutorial, we’ll make a scene with flaming bombs pouring from the sky. This tut is made to show some down and dirty Photoshop tricks that beginners can quickly pick up. It also includes some relatively advanced techniques to help budding designers enhance their workflow. Let’s get started!
Introduction
This is my first tutorial. Although I’ve done many lectures in person, I’ve never attempted to move my teachings to the web. The way I structure my tutorials revolves around my primary goal: to not only show you how to do these things, but make you understand why you are doing them. It is one thing to just be aware of how to achieve a certain effect, but to full understand it leads to your own personal modification and application of the things you’ve learned. In turn, making you a better designer.Throughout the course of this tutorial you’ll see small paragraphs of text that start with "Note:" These paragraphs are just short helpful tips related to whatever technique we may be using. For seasoned photoshop veterans, they’ll most likely be common knowledge, but for beginner to intermediate Photoshopers, they may prove to be quite valuable. Well, with that out of the way, let’s start making our composition!
Final Image Preview
Take a look at the image we’ll be creating.Video Tutorial
Our video editor Gavin Steele has created this video tutorial to compliment this text + image tutorial.Step 1 – Choose Your Images
Choosing your images is a key part of making a successful composition. Anybody can just run out to Google Images and snag whatever they want, but we’re better than that aren’t we. Sites like Stock.Xchange (sxc.hu) and Stockvault.net offer tons of outstanding stock photos that are free! Unfortunately, sometimes the images you find on these free sites don’t match your vision. Oftentimes, you may end up having to go to sites like iStockphoto to purchase professional images for a fee. But we’re in luck! For this composition all of the images are free!When selecting images for a composition, keep one thing in mind: You need to be looking for images that have the same, or very close to the same lighting as each other. Items in your composition need to have the same lighting for your composition to feel plausible.
Granted fantasy scenes aren’t necessarily intended to be realistic in the first place, but using images that have different lighting in the same composition can literally ruin the entire thing. One type of lighting that is sometimes an exception to this rule is lighting that is neutral. An example would be a cloudy gray day, where all the lighting is the same. This may need very little or no sprucing to make it fit your composition nicely.
Now, let’s take a look at what we’ve got to work with here. Here are the images we’ll be using for this design: Desert, Cloud 1, Cloud 2, Fire, Bomb, and Red Smoke.
Step 2 – Setting Up Your Document
Let’s begin by creating a new document. I chose 10in x 8in for this composition. If you don’t have a computer with enough power to handle that, then use something smaller but with the same dimensions, 5in x 4in will work.Start by making three Gradient Map Adjustment layers with the following properties.
Step 3 – Desert Image Cleanup
Drag and drop the Desert image into the new document. The horizon on this guy is bowed a bit, and is tilted a little off center. So start out by scaling the image so it takes up the whole frame of the document. You should end up with something like the image below.Note: Using adjustment layers is a GREAT way to apply various effects to the items in your composition, but the awesome thing about adjustment layers is that you can go back and tweak the settings at any time.
Applying the effects right to the raw item itself is all well and fine if the adjustment will not have to be touched again throughout the comp process. However, if you continuously apply effects to the raw item, each time it degrades the quality of the item ultimately resulting in loss of pixel information. So, in a nutshell, adjustment layers are good to use.
Step 4 – Bombs
Open up the Bomb image. Using the Magic Wand Tool (W) with the settings shown, select the white area of the image. Select Inverse (Command + Shift + I).Note: There are tons of ways to make selections. Most of the time, we’d go in with the Pen Tool and trace the bomb, and make the path into a selection. In this case, however, the bomb is on a nice, solid white background and the bomb already has nice solid lines, so in this case we’ll use the quick and easy Magic Wand Tool.
Note: Clipping masks take the effect layer that you’ve created and apply it only to the layer underneath it. Practice with these. Once you get the hang of them, you’ll wonder how you ever got by without them.
Step 5 – Smoke
Now that we’ve got our bombs where we want them, lets add some smoke! We’ll start by creating our own smoke using custom brush settings. Create a new layer, and use the brush settings shown.Note: Custom brush settings are also a great tool for designers to use. It’s extremely versatile and is valuable to learn. My best suggestion, would be to just go in and start playing around with different settings. Experimentation is one of the most efficient ways to learn Photoshop because you’re learning along the way.
Note: When using the "Scatter" brush setting, it randomly generates where your brush spots will end up. So to get the exact spray of smoke you want, you may have to make a stroke, undo it, and try again until you get it just right.
Note: You can also use Shift in this case to select the whole range by clicking on "Smoke 1 copy," holding Shift, and clicking on "Smoke 1 copy 3."
Step 6 – Clouds
Now those clouds in the background sure look boring. Lets make things a little more interesting. Open up the Cloud 1 and Cloud 2 images. Drag the cloud image that has grass at the bottom of the image into the composition. Line the bottom of the tree line up with the horizon of our desert image.Use the Marquee Tool (M) to select the bottom half of the “cloud” layer. Hit Delete and check your results against the image below.
Now that we’ve got them all made into clipping masks, lets add some effects using the settings below.
First, put a layer mask on the “New Cloud” Layer, and paint with a black, soft edge brush so that the only thing left visible of our “New Cloud” layer, is the biggest cloud puff, as shown.
Step 7 – Fire!
Lets put some flames on these puppies. Start by opening up your Fire image and dragging it into the composition. Set the “Fire 1″ layer’s blend mode to Screen. Move and resize it so you have something close to this.Step 8 – Rain
There are a ton of ways to make artificial rain, This particular method, although not the most realistic, is really great practice with duplicating, merging and changing layers. Start by making a new layer. Select a small, white, hard-edged brush. Make a single point by left clicking once. Hold the Shift key, and click somewhere diagonally below your original point.Usually if I’m doing something that requires a lot of layer duplication, I’ll merge (select layers, Command + E) the finished product into one or two layers to keep the clutter down. At this point, you should have something along the lines of the image shown below..
Step 9 – Finishing Touches
We’re almost there! The end is in site! Lets wrap this sucker up! Lets start by adding a vignette to generate a better focal point. Make a new layer. Now, using a black to transparent Gradient (G), draw from the corners of the comp to around just outside the general vicinity of the bombs, as shown.Duplicate them. Then, after you have a copy of all two billion layers, merge them (Command + E). Using Hue-Saturation, take the lightness all the way down to -100. Apply a Gaussian Blur to the layer ( Filter > Gaussian Blur) with a Radius of 6.0 pixels. Flip the layer Vertically. Set the layer Opacity to 60%.
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