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3D Effect in Photoshop

Author: Vecpix.com Author's URL: www.vecpix.com More by this author

The concept of depth is easily defined through playing with light and dark colors. Here's an easy way.

1. Gradient

Start off with a new document. Then select the Gradient Tool and select a medium gray color as your foreground, and a dark gray color as your background. Then select the Radial Gradient Tool from the options bar. Make a gradient from the top left to to the bottom right like so:

image 1

2. Type

Make a New Layer. Make your type or whatever you want. It doesn't matter what color. This is mine:

image 2

3. Gradient

Make a New Layer. Then make a selection around the layer with your type (Ctrl+Click+Layer). Select a light gray color as your foreground color and a medium gray color as your background color. Drag a gradient from the top left of the type to the bottom right.

image 3

4. Shadow

Now, select the gradient layer. Hold down Ctrl+Alt and nudge the selection left five times. The Ctrl+Alt makes it that it would make a new layer every nudge. When you're done, it should look like this:

image 4

5. Merge Layers

Merge all the layer copies, but leave the original layer, and then drag the merged layer below the original. Then, go to Image>Adjustments>Brightness/Contrast. Drag the contrast bar all the way to 0. Finally, go to Image>Adjustments>Hue/Saturation (Ctrl+U). Drag the Lightness slider up until it's a dark gray. here's what I mean:

image 5

6. Drop Shadow

Finally, select the newly lightened layer, and under the layers palette, go to Blending Options. Check Drop Shadow, leave the default settings, and you're done!

3D Effect in Photoshop

Final Thoughts:

You can change the direction of light by adjusting where the gradient starts. Try different things with this. Good luck =)