Find out the real might of Photoshop filters and the techniques used to create abstract images. This section contains the most unexpected graphic results.  Home Photoshop Special Effects Quick and effective planet star and meteor impact

Quick and effective planet star and meteor impact


To complete this tutorial, you will need the following stocks:

Soil Texture

Step 1

Create a new document sized 740px * 700px, fill the background with black colour. Create a new layer called "planet", and use the Elliptical Marquee Tool with 1px feature, hold down Shift Key and draw a circle as shown below:

image 1

Press Shift + F5 and fill the circle with white colour:

image 2

Move this circle to the bottom right corner of the canvas:

image 3

On this planet layer, apply the following layer blending options:

Drop Shadow

image 4

Outer Glow

image 5

Bevel and Emboss

image 6

Gradient Overlay

image 7

and here is the effect so far:

image 8

Step 2

New I would like to add some irregularly lighting around the planet. To do this, add a layer mask on the planet layer as shown below:

image 9

and here is the effect after applying the layer mask:

image 10

Load the "Soil Texture" into Photoshop, load the selection of the planet layer and move the selection onto the soil texture, then copy and paste a piece of soil onto our canvas as shown below: (make sure you fit the selection to the planet circle we drew before)

image 11

Change the blending mode of this soil layer to "Overlay", drop the layer opacity to 65%, you will have the following effect:

image 12

Add the following adjustment layer to the soil texture layer: (make sure to tick the "use previous layer as clipping mask" option)

Black and White

image 13

Levels

image 14

and here is the effect so far:

image 15

Step 3

Now let's add a bit of cloudy effect around the planet to make it look more mysterious. Create a new layer called "cloud" and use the Lasso tool with 50px feather to draw a selection as shown below:

image 16

Render some cloud inside the selection as shown below:

image 17

Press Ctrl + L to bring up the Level adjustment tool, apply the following settings to add some contrast in the cloud:

image 18

Warp the cloud as shown below:

image 19

Then resize and rotate the cloud if necessary, and make a few duplicates of the cloud layer, scatter them around the planet to areas shown below:

image 20

Keep adding more cloud effect around the planet by duplicate the cloud layer a few times, adjust the layer opacity along the way to fine-tune the effect:

image 21

Step 4

Now let's add a simple meteor effect to the planet. Create a new layer and use a big soft brush with white colour, do a single click to the area shown below, adjust the brush size accordingly:

image 22

Duplicate this light layer twice, change the blending mode of the duplicated layer to "soft light":

image 23

Then create a new layer, this time use a smaller soft white brush, do a single click to the spot shown below:

image 24

Duplicate this smaller light layer twice, and change the blending mode of the duplicated layer to "overlay", you will have the following effect:

image 25

Create a new layer on top of all previous layers, use a soft white brush and do a single click to the position shown below:

image 26

Distort this dot as show below:

image 27

Hit Enter, then apply the distort option again as shown below:

image 28

Add a Curves adjustment layer on top to tweak the image contrast a bit:

image 29

and here is the effect I have so far:

image 30

Step 5

Now let's add a new layer called "Star" on top of all previous layers, fill the layer with black colour, and go to Filter > Noise > Add Noise and apply the following settings:

image 31

Change the blending mode of the star layer to "Screen", you will have the following effect:

image 32

Of course we don't want the entire canvas to be covered with noise, so use a soft eraser to remove the areas where you don't want the noise to appear:

image 33

For add some depth to the star field, we can use the dodge tool to highlight centain part of the image where you want the star to become brighter than others:

For tutorial purpose, here is a before and after view of the dodge tool so you can the effect: (the setting for Dodge Tool is Midtone, and Exposure 70%)

Before:

image 34

After:

image 35

and here is the effect so far:

image 36

Step 6

Ok we're nearly done. For the final tune-ups, I flattened the image, (good idea to save an extra copy before you do so), duplicate the background layer once and applied the Smart Sharpen filter on the duplicated layer:

image 37

I also added a colour layer on top and added some color to the areas indicated below with a soft brush:

The area where meteor effect is:

image 38

and the bottom left portion of the planet:

image 39

For adding some painting effect to the image, you can again duplicate the background layer, then use the "Accented Edges" filter under the Brush Strokes option on the duplicated layer with the following settings:

image 40

As you can see, certain part of the image will have some brush stroke effect:

image 41

and the image become a bit more painting-like:

image 42

You can also add a layer mask to hide certain parts which you don't want the painting effect to show:

image 43

and here is the final effect I have for this tutorial: (click to enlarge)

Star and Meteor Impact

OK that's it for this tutorial! Hope you enjoy it and find it useful and inspirational. If you have any question, drop a comment below and I will try my best to help you out.



Author's URL: psdvault
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Find out the real might of Photoshop filters and the techniques used to create abstract images. This section contains the most unexpected graphic results. More Special Effects Tutorials: Featured Materials | Fresh Materials | TutorialKit New Photoshop Tutorials


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