timetobegin (
timetobegin) wrote in
oh_crime2019-01-13 11:25 am
Entry tags:
Tutorial : Icon cut-outs
to
I love cutting people out of backgrounds, and it's pretty simple. Lots of people use masking, and other various ways, but i honestly just duplicate it, and then use the eraser brush or the paint brush.
Here is this icon of Gwen and how i did it.
STEP ONE
To prepare my screencap, i add x2 screen layers, a vibrance layer and a selective colour layer (to increase the blacks) I'd likely do more colouring later, but it helps to just know what sort of colours you are dealing with. I then stamp it, which is a new layer that is a "stamp" or merge of all the previous layers. If you don't stamp (ctrl+shift+alt+e) you can merge visible layers and use that. I duplicate that layer so i can use it. Sometimes I sharpen at this point to make the edges easier to see

Now I try to be careful when i'm painting around my subject, in this case Gwen but i still find that cutouts usually look a little off. I try to use the smallest brush i can, and make sure its on hard edge. Once i've done that you'll get your basic cutout, which occasionally will be the nearly the finished icon! But then I add lots of other stuff to help subdue the cutout and help it blend into the background a little more. These are usually; lighting layers, softlight layers and textures. In this case i did a bit of everything :)
Firstly I used this texture by

Next, I create a new layer and draw a soft line around gwen - quite big. I then blur that layer (Filter > Blur > Gaussian blur) at 52% so that the background blends into the hair. I'm still not happy with how the right of her hair, but the left is starting to look pretty good.

Now it's time to find some textures that might help this icon. I find that grungy textures and patterns work really well on covering up awkward looking cutouts. I find this flower pattern texture (not sure where i got it from) and think it will work really well with both Gwen and the icon. So i paste it on as a new layer and set that layer to screen. But obviously it covers her face, so i take an eraser to it and edit out the parts covering her up. I end up playing around with it so that it's rotated and size the way i like it, an the texture is over that part of hair i'm not fond of.

Finally, i add a few white blobs to a black layer, and set to screen to add some "glow" and sharpen it again before resizing and hey presto:

There is a lot going on in this post, but if you have any questions, Feel free to ask!
You can copy and replicate everything i did here if you like. I don't mind :)
PSD

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