Create a Cool Wet Ink Typography Effect in Photoshop

Follow this Photoshop tutorial to create an awesome distorted type
design. Using a range of Photoshop brushes we’ll create the appearance
of printed type that has come into contact with drops of water, breaking
up the text with oversaturated drips, runs and splats.


Ink typography design

I was recently out at the clothes store and came across a cool
t-shirt by Diesel. The design featured some nice typography that had
been treated to some image manipulation to give an awesome effect of wet
ink, as if the design has come into contact with drops of water that
distorted the print.

I remember originally seeing a similar design by Craig Ward, with his amazing ‘Ink and water don’t mix’
design. I’m not sure whether Craig was also behind the t-shirt art, but
I fancied giving the effect a go myself, so I booted up Photoshop and
started experimenting. Follow this walkthrough to see the simple steps
of creating a similar design, using ready-made brushes to distort some
typography of our own.

Start work in Photoshop by creating a new canvas. I’ve chosen to
create a landscape poster. Set out a phrase using a classy and
sophisticated font, such as Bodoni.

Split the words into their own layers and move them into position to
form a balanced layout, align elements of the words with the letters
above and below to give structure.

We could get our hands dirty and splash some ink onto some paper and
scan in the results, but instead we can take the easy route and use
ready-made resources from generous designers and artists. Scour the web
for collections of ink splatter brushes for Photoshop. Here’s the
selection I personally picked out:

Download and arrange the ABR files into a file. In Photoshop click
the tiny arrow in the Brushes palette and select Preset Manager then
load all the ink brushes.

Pick out interesting ink shapes from the various brushes and paint
odd splats and runs over the type on a new layer. Adjust the size of the
brush by using the square bracket keys.

Tailor the shape of the ink splatter towards a similar area of a
letter, so for instance if it’s a long ink mark, paint this over a
suitably long, straight letter.

Give some letters some major distortion by adding plenty of ink marks, but keep the words legible when viewed at 100%.

Some brushes in the set are created with paint brushes. Since this
design is meant to look like it’s naturally distorted by water drops,
just pick out the drops, splats and subtle drips.

You can reuse brushes while avoiding any repeating shapes by rotating
the brush in the brushes palette. Grab the circular crosshair to adjust
the angle.

When the design is nearing completion, download some spraypaint brushes to make use of tiny drips to add some little touches to the design.

Download a grungy paper texture
to add some visual interest to the background. Desaturate the image and
drop the opacity right down to 15% to leave subtle background tones.

Ink typography design

Take a look over the design at 100% and make any final tweaks. Adjust
the opacity of any layers that are taking too much prominence, and use a
small soft round brush to blend in specific areas of ink and text.

Tutorial Author: http://www.blog.spoongraphics.co.uk/

Share

No Comments

No comments yet.

Comments RSS TrackBack Identifier URI

Leave a comment

Inch Clothing – skill and style B3 BeFree Clothing – hiphop, skateboard clothing