A while back I did a post about a company called Daniel Clark and Associates. They design marketing material for major motion pictures. Well, there is another company I found online that does even more cool Hollywood stuff. They are called BLT & Associates and get this, their site is bltomato.com. That’s too funny and with a portfolio of Hollywood’s biggest blockbusters, they have truly cemented themselves as the source for feature film branding. Just looking through their portfolio of images always sparks something for me. They have just recently redesigned their site with neat Flash interactivity that allows you to move around a mosaic of movie posters. It really is pretty cool! Check it out!
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Corey shows you how to recreate this rugged, weathered look using a couple of filters, blending modes, and layer masks.
Use a clipping group to place an image inside of a background of text, with another layer of text placed in front to create depth.
In this tutorial Corey shows you how to take an existing image and turn it into it’s own custom brush.
In this tutorial Corey creates a realistic-looking coin effect using the channels palette and the lighting effects filter.
If you’re trying to set type that looks typographically correct in Photoshop, there’s an old habit you’ll have to break, and that’s the curse of putting two spaces at the end of every sentence. This is a holdover from people who at one time used traditional typewriters, where adding two spaces was necessary, but in typesetting that’s a huge no-no. About 70% of the text I copy-and-paste from text files that people give me has two spaces, but I use this Photoshop tip to fix the problem in just seconds. First, go under the Edit menu and choose Find and Replace Text. In the Find field, press the Spacebar twice (entering two spaces), then in Change To, press the Spacebar just once. Click Change All, and every time Photoshop finds two spaces at the end of a sentence, it will replace it with just one, making you typographically correct.