A sparkly, seamlessly repeating, high res glitter pattern set for photoshop. As well as the .pat file, also in the pack are JPEGs that can be used as a repeat if you don’t have Photoshop. This set costs just £2.00 and is licensed for commercial use!
Do you have a glitter (or is it possible to make this kind of glitter) that is not in color? One that I can apply to artwork (pin, medal, emblem, etc.) where the glitter will take on the color of the underlying artwork?
Or a glitter style where the color can be added later?
hi Francine
Best way to do this would be to apply the pattern then change the hue by going to image > adjustments > hue saturation.
OR you can make a selection around the part of the image you want to be glittery, then make a new layer, and using the fill tool (set to pattern) fill in that selection.
Deselect after youve filled in with the pattern.
Then choose a layer blend style. Go to Layers > Layer style > blending options and choose a blend style to suit. Multiply with opacity set to around 80% will probably work ok.
Finally adjust your contrast a little and it should do the job. Its a matter of experimenting really.
Hope this helps!
These are absolutely great! thanks a million
Hi,
I like your glitter effects.
Do you have a glitter (or is it possible to make this kind of glitter) that is not in color? One that I can apply to artwork (pin, medal, emblem, etc.) where the glitter will take on the color of the underlying artwork?
Or a glitter style where the color can be added later?
thanks so much,
Francine
hi Francine
Best way to do this would be to apply the pattern then change the hue by going to image > adjustments > hue saturation.
OR you can make a selection around the part of the image you want to be glittery, then make a new layer, and using the fill tool (set to pattern) fill in that selection.
Deselect after youve filled in with the pattern.
Then choose a layer blend style. Go to Layers > Layer style > blending options and choose a blend style to suit. Multiply with opacity set to around 80% will probably work ok.
Finally adjust your contrast a little and it should do the job. Its a matter of experimenting really.
Hope this helps!