Paint a DIGITAL WATERCOLOR Photoshop actually includes a
Paint a DIGITAL WATERCOLOR Photoshop actually includes a Watercolor filter in the Filter Gallery. This filter generally adds too much black to replicate a traditional watercolor. A true watercolor palette includes only gray and no black paint at all. Because watercolors not only have soft edges but also minimal transitions of color tones, you get the best results by applying the Reduce Noise or the Median filter to the photo before starting to create the painting. These filters are found in the Filter menu under Noise. By applying a filter first, you eliminate some of the color changes and sharp edges that make a photograph look like a photograph. With a limited color palette, the Dry Brush filter creates a more painterly image. Then using the Smart Blur filter after the Dry Brush filter has been applied blends the paints to complete the effect. Traditional watercolor paintings often leave rough edges around the borders and even some blank areas in the painting, so do not completely paint away all the white in the top layer. ** (( && rr yy )) qq ee tt 186 The top layer fills with a translucent white. & Click the Eraser tool. * Click the Brush thumbnail. ( Click a large chalk-style brush. ) Click and drag in the document using short strokes until the painting is visible. q Click the word Opacity and drag to the right to increase the opacity to 100%. w Press +E (Ctrl+E) to merge the two top layers. e Click and drag the new merged Dry Brush copy layer over the New Layer button to duplicate it. r Click Filter. t Click Texture. y Click Texturizer.
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