How can this be done

Saleen1999

Senior Member
Messages
1,843
Solutions
1
Reaction score
233
Location
Virginia, US
It’s been a long while since I’ve had time to spend on this forum I was always on this forum constantly but I got my job back in 2012 and raised my kids came first With that being said I’ve learned a lot and pay a lot for PS but never have time for it

With that being said I saw this picture and love the artwork that was done to and would like to know how I can achieve that same look for landscapes. Thank you



9b6ded861d704ab3b00cbb0894b98dc7.jpg



--
Melissa
Adobe Photoshop CC 2020
PaintShop Pro 2019 Ultimate
Lightroom CC
Gimp
 
Isn't that effect like your "Ray Sketch 1" from 2005?
 
With that being said I saw this picture and love the artwork that was done to and would like to know how I can achieve that same look for landscapes. Thank you
Well, that's a drawing, of course, not a photo. But starting with a photo (landscape), you might experiment with this old-school sketch technique:
  1. Duplicate base layer
  2. Invert the duplicate
  3. Change blend mode to Color Dodge
  4. Paint with white directly on that layer, soft brush, very low brush opacity
  5. Optional: Open a hue/sat adjustment layer and reduce saturation to taste
7357dec90cd94cc180ba3e4236045245.jpg

--
Harwood
 
Last edited:
It’s been a long while since I’ve had time to spend on this forum I was always on this forum constantly but I got my job back in 2012 and raised my kids came first With that being said I’ve learned a lot and pay a lot for PS but never have time for it

With that being said I saw this picture and love the artwork that was done to and would like to know how I can achieve that same look for landscapes. Thank you

9b6ded861d704ab3b00cbb0894b98dc7.jpg
Well, if you have the NEWEST Version of Photoshop, you can simply type in what you want to see, and have Generative Fill create whatever you can imagine.

Just let your imagination run free, and type it in the box.

Create a NEW File, and then at the bottom of the Tool Bar, select the Generative Fill Box.

Choose Photo, or Art. Then choose an effect. Play with the Different effects. If you like the Pencil Color type effect, select a drawing type effect.

In this version Mellissa, I chose ART, and Oil Paint as my Effect. Then I typed in, "Snow capped Mountains in the background at Sunset time, with houses, trees and landscape in the foreground". See what it creates for you. Try different effects and different imaginations. It is fun to play with. I have made several photos, and even backgrounds, or backdrops with this tool.



a8e520138d5b47efbb60214ae81ead24.jpg





--
Major Jack
"You are welcome to retouch any photograph I post in these forums without prior consent from me". Have fun, and play as you wish.
 
Very good tip!
 
Here is what looks like the original available at Walmart. It was an engraving. You'll find it with a Google Image search.

cb11c721-da1b-40db-aa68-d420718fb0c5_1.76e378f1d7ad6a39fed9cf1c8c4b55f7.jpeg


It looks like someone water colored it and screwed around with it some more.

Nand.

--
I never worked a day in my long life. And it's too late to start now.
 
Last edited:
Here is what looks like the original available at Walmart. It was an engraving. You'll find it with a Google Image search.

cb11c721-da1b-40db-aa68-d420718fb0c5_1.76e378f1d7ad6a39fed9cf1c8c4b55f7.jpeg


It looks like someone water colored it and screwed around with it some more.

Nand.
The engraving Landing of Emigrants from the Ship “Kossuth,” at the foot of Rutgers’ Slip, New York — an 1851 volume 7 page 101 wood-engraving first published in Gleason’s Pictorial Drawing-Room Companion (Boston).

If you want to see the original it is here from 1851:

GLEASON'S PICTORIAL DRAWING-ROOM COMPANION 1851-06-14: Vol 1 Iss 7 at the bottom of page 101.



304974afd8ba4500ae88b467cf26d4e5.jpg



.

--
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
"A photograph is a secret about a secret. The more it tells you the less you know." - Diane Arbus
 

Attachments

  • 0565f0e9286d40708076a310c8bf5981.jpg
    0565f0e9286d40708076a310c8bf5981.jpg
    1.1 MB · Views: 0
Last edited:
... I saw this picture and love the artwork that was done to and would like to know how I can achieve that same look for landscapes.
9b6ded861d704ab3b00cbb0894b98dc7.jpg

I guess the answer is find a digitized version of an old engraving, manipulate it, colorize it, and superimpose a moiré pattern onto it.
 
It looks like the moiré pattern was not done intentional, since it shows up all over the page including the text and even outside page. Perhaps caused by the scanner.

Nand.
 
It looks like the moiré pattern was not done intentional, since it shows up all over the page including the text and even outside page. Perhaps caused by the scanner.

Nand.
If you look at the original 1851 engraving there is no moiré pattern evident.
 
Last edited:
It looks like the moiré pattern was not done intentional, since it shows up all over the page including the text and even outside page. Perhaps caused by the scanner.

Nand.
b18886bf60714b208c6565cdaa0341cd.jpg.png

Here is the image with the moiré removed. Using AI, sorry.

Nand.

--
I never worked a day in my long life. And it's too late to start now.
 

Keyboard shortcuts

Back
Top