I believe you're correct. Either way works. Using the magic wand, you can select the blank area, then invert the selection and paint it all white. Takes about five seconds.That .gif looks like it's transparent (no background color). If it is, then you can just play around with the saturation/contrast/lightness until it's all one color. I think.
Would any of you photoshop gurus be able to tell me how to make something like this?
Yep, agreed. Looks like there might be an extra texture layer or two in there as well and definitely a vignette added. Can't forget about those two little features.The background appears to be a standard photograph of a concrete wall/floor. The USA Track & Field logo was pasted on as a second layer in photoshop, and (probably using the magic wand tool), the various shapes were selected and changed to white. From there it looks like they changed the opacity of the layer to about 33% or so. EDIT - here's that logo, if you're thinking of doing something like this:
Oh, duh. Forgot about that. Yes, that is fasterI believe you're correct. Either way works. Using the magic wand, you can select the blank area, then invert the selection and paint it all white. Takes about five seconds.That .gif looks like it's transparent (no background color). If it is, then you can just play around with the saturation/contrast/lightness until it's all one color. I think.
We are in exactly the same boat. Thanks for the links, Landlord!I have CS5, but I probably only use about 10% of its capabilities. I need to spend time looking at some online tutorials because I am wasting this program on my computer.
I am a huge proponent of Tuts+. Very good suggestion. I am really digging the Tuts+ Hub too, haven't used it much so far though.
I am a huge proponent of Tuts+. Very good suggestion. I am really digging the Tuts+ Hub too, haven't used it much so far though.
No more ponies OK?I am a huge proponent of Tuts+. Very good suggestion. I am really digging the Tuts+ Hub too, haven't used it much so far though.
I don't spend as much time on there in the last few years, but psdtuts is almost exclusively what made my graphic design work go from decidedly amateur to professional quality.