Photo to Drawing

 

Corey shows you how to create a drawing from a photo and blend the two.

Corey Barker is Executive Producer of PlanetPhotoshop.com and is an Education and Curriculum Developer for the National Association of Photoshop Professionals. He has earned numerous Photoshop awards in design and illustration and has contributed writing to Photoshop User Magazine and PhotoshopElementsUser.com. Corey has also made numerous appearances on the highly rated podcast, Photoshop TV.

8 Comments

  1. NPM said on — April 7, 2008 @ 4:23 pm

    By far one of the best and most creative uses for Photoshop.

  2. Silvia said on — April 14, 2008 @ 6:00 am

    a very nice effect and very well explained

  3. Rhonda said on — April 20, 2008 @ 2:40 pm

    Really nice, not to hard to follow. I love these types of effects.

  4. Junior said on — May 10, 2008 @ 3:05 am

    A very nice software and very handy to use. Creating new visualize effect will definetly enhance my creativity.

  5. Aby said on — May 10, 2008 @ 12:39 pm

    these natural and artistic effects are simply gr8……thanks alot …..very nicely xplained :)

  6. jenny said on — May 11, 2008 @ 3:58 am

    There are still a lot of us who have dial-up.
    This tutorial was useless.

    How about words and pictures -disjointed words are not helpful!!!

  7. jenny said on — May 11, 2008 @ 4:00 am

    I thought that it may just be one or two which were slow to load.
    This site has so much potential, particularly for a teacher of digital graphics!!!

  8. h mark conner said on — May 11, 2008 @ 6:57 am

    great tutorial, just awsome thanks

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Removing Those Typographically Incorrect Spaces

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.

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