How to Add Most High Graphics to Complex Perspectives in Photoshop 2020 for Beginners! - Get Helpful Info and Review

Get Helpful Info and Review

Get Helpful Info and Review

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Thursday, July 2, 2020

How to Add Most High Graphics to Complex Perspectives in Photoshop 2020 for Beginners!

How to Add Most High Graphics to Complex Perspectives in Photoshop 2020 for Beginners! Hi, my name is Ahmad from SmartWorldApps.blogspot.com.

 

In this post, I wanted to show you something. Have a look at this. What is this? This is a picture of a lady sitting on a bunch of stairs, right? There's a nice perspective going on, everything is looking nice and clean. However, let me ask you a question. If I start sketching on it, painting on it or place something on it, the paint will be applied how? It will be applied in such a way that this is a flat surface. It'll not treat it as there's a perspective going on or there's a nice lady sitting edit. It won't consider any of that.

It'll just paint on it like it's a flat surface. Why? Because this, my friend, is a flat surface. Similarly in Photoshop, if you just start painting on this picture, let me show you if we just start painting, right, the paint is being applied as if this is a flat surface because it is a flat surface. However, there's a feature in Photoshop that lets you define the perspective, no matter how complex that is.

So, if you can define the perspective in Photoshop and then paint on it, it will be applied in such a way that there's actually this scene happening, and the paint will go along with the perspective. And the feature is called Vanishing Point. So, today we're going to learn how to use the power of vanishing points to apply any graphic on any surface according to the perspective, no matter how complex that is. It's going to be super fun.

So, without any further ado, let's get started. Back in the magical world of Photoshop, and if you go ahead and download this photo and follow along, you know what to do. Check the links in the description. The first step is defining the perspective. This is just telling Photoshop the nature of perspective, that's it. We're not creating anything, applying anything, pasting anything. This is just telling Photoshop the nature of the image and the perspective and the way we do that is by going to Filter and then Vanishing Point.

Now, we just need to create one plane and from there, we will take it forward. Have a look at a plane that you can create boundaries around. So, in this case, I can see that there's a nice boundary around this step, right there, that we can use to start our perspective plane. To do that, we're going to use the Create Plane tool, right there. All right, it will be selected by default. Now, click on the four points of this plane. So I'm going to click in right there and let's continue. Don't worry about the subject right now. We're going to erase that area later, mask that later.

Alright, this looks pretty fine. Now, this rectangle, this plane, is blue and it will create the best results. However, sometimes you might come across red rectangles. It doesn't mean that you cannot work with it, but it will not create good results. So, make sure your rectangle is blue. There's one more variant of this. Sometimes you might see a yellow rectangle. That is kind of okay. So think of it like this - Red, stay away from it, Yellow is kind of okay, Blue is the best.

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