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Halftone Mania

Author: Tommy Maloney More by this author


When I was thumbing through some magazines the other day, I noticed a number of ads using halftone effects. Photoshop provides a few different ways to show a halftone effect. This tutorial will walk you through them.

The first one is the Halftone Pattern filter. We'll start with our image, I used another from PhotoSpin, and extracting the object from the background.

image 1

The Halftone Pattern Filter works with the two colors you have chosen as your foreground/background. I sampled two colors from her skin.

image 2

Duplicate the layer Ctrl + J. Go to Filter > Sketch > Halftone Pattern. You can adjust the settings as you wish, my settings were:

Size: 2

Contrast: 5

Pattern Type: dot

image 3

image 4

Prett exciting, huh? I haven't found any practical uses for that one yet, but now you know it's there.

The next one is the Color Halftone filter. Start by duplicating your layer Ctrl + J. Select the original layer (not the one you just duplicated) and run a Gaussian Blur Filter > Blur > Gaussian Blur. Set the amount high, to 30 or 40 pixels.

image 5

Now go to Filter > Pixelate > Color Halftone. You can adjust the settings as you want, but I just left mine default. Hit OK, and now...

image 6

The third way is a little more of the effect I see in magazines. Right-click on your object layer and choose Duplicate Layer. When the dialog pops up, name it whatever you like, but set the destination to New.

image 7

In your new document, go to Image > Mode > Grayscale. A dialog might pop-up asking to discard the color information. Choose yes.

Now run a big Gaussian Blur Filter > Blur > Gaussian Blur of around 30 or 40.

image 8

Go to Image > Mode > Bitmap. Under Method, choose Halftone Screen.

image 9

In the next dialog box, set the Frequency to around 8 or 10 and the Shape to Round.

image 10

You should now get an effect like this:

image 11

Set the Image Mode back to Grayscale Image > Mode > Grayscale. Apply a slight Guassian blur of around 1-pixel to smooth out the rough edges.

image 12

Now bring up the Levels Dialog Ctrl + L and drag the sliders closer to each other to sharpen the pattern a bit.

image 13

You can now drag that layer back to your original document.

image 14

That's about it for Photoshop's halftone effects.

Halftone Mania Tutorial: Final Result



Author's URL: www.photoshoplab.com

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