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Hey, thank you for taking a look at my problem/question! I would like to know, how to apply this effect (picture following) to texts in Photoshop. Is it done with certain filters, if so, which filters? Please be as detailed as possible, because I already tried to work with filters and it didn't look like the text in the picture. Thank you in advance 🙂
Unfortunately, due to a bug in teh forum software, we can't view your screenshots full size to see the exact noise.
Try creating noise on layer (as described by Jane) and clipping it to the text then adjust the opacity and blend mode (I used dissolve). Also clip a curve and adjust the contrast as required.
Always view noise and grain at 100% zoom.
Dave
Zooming in on your image, it also appears to have signs of being "over jpeg'd". There seems to be damage close to the edge of the letters. If that's the look you are trying to duplicate:
Be sure to do it to a copy of the image, as you will not be able to remove the damage. JPEGs are los
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Are you talking about the letters being at different angles? I don't see anything that could be a filter.
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I was referring to this "graining effect" which is in the whole picture but it doesn't seem to be the the normal graining filter of Photoshop.
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@Ludwig Eldad wrote:
I was referring to this "graining effect"
Try this:
Adjust both filters as needed
Jane
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Thank you already for your effort. I tried the steps you explained and here is the result... I think it doesn't look close to what I want though haha.
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Create a duplicate layer,
Rasterize the type and rotate the letters the way you want them to look. Add another layer and create the oval make it the color you want. Make sure you put the oval layer under the text.
I hope this helps.
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Thank you but I wasn't referring to that. I only want to know, how can I make a text look exactly like this with this "graining effect" like in the example picture. It's not about the oval, only about the little effect on the letters.
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I am sorry, did you try to duplicate the layer and add a pattern to the duplicate layer? You can play with the opacity.
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I am not sure if you are asking a genuine question, or fulfilling your witnessing quotia for today.
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I am serious about the question. If I would want to spread the word of God, I think there would be more effective ways 😄
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I am serious about the question. If I would want to spread the word of God, I think there would be more effective ways 😄
By @Ludwig Eldad
This forum is not an appropriate medium for you to share your belief system. If you are honest about seeking advice, then please chose less contentious images — they would work exactly the same. I'm asking you nicely as a forum Moderator.
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I would be very happy if someone could explain to me, how I could make a text look like this (with this kind of "grainy effect"). It gives the letters a vintage look. I already tried the noise filter, but it turned out to not be close to how it is in the picture below. Thanks in advance for your help!
[Duplicate threads merged by moderator. Please post once and add to the current thread.]
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Unfortunately, due to a bug in teh forum software, we can't view your screenshots full size to see the exact noise.
Try creating noise on layer (as described by Jane) and clipping it to the text then adjust the opacity and blend mode (I used dissolve). Also clip a curve and adjust the contrast as required.
Always view noise and grain at 100% zoom.
Dave
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Zooming in on your image, it also appears to have signs of being "over jpeg'd". There seems to be damage close to the edge of the letters. If that's the look you are trying to duplicate:
Be sure to do it to a copy of the image, as you will not be able to remove the damage. JPEGs are lossy, meaning they lose information with each save. A Best Practice is to save in a non-lossy format such as PSD or TIFF, then save once to JPEG. Changes are made in the non-lossy version, then a new JPEG is saved.
Jane