Incredibly well-made tutorial! You went straight into it...no intro fluff or cheesy background music...and got right down and dirty and moved through the steps at a good pace. I'll be sure to subscribe. Do you do other Adobe product tutorials as well? Like Illustrator or InDesign?
Thanks! You'll find some Adobe Premiere Tutorials on my channel in a playlist. I also have a few Adobe Mobile Apps in my App's Playlist and I have some ideas for more in the future!
Nice! I havent played much with Premiere yet...but I'd love to get some tips on how to use the rotorbrush so I can use the Ultra Key to make greenscreen-able video layers...
The more I watch your videos the more I realize that even after decades of Photoshop and I'm really good at my job, I suck. lol. Keep up the good work.
Excellent tutorial, thanks! However the image still looks a bit like a photo because of the edges, stencils have a unique edge that makes them look sprayed on. Or maybe it's just because of the image you used. Any thoughts?
Is there a way to separate the different colors (e.g. white, black, gray) to their own layer? That way, I can print them out and actually use it as a stencil...
G Elerson honesty, you could just use the selection wand for this; select all the black areas, cut them and paste them onto a new layer. Repeat this for all of your colors.
+JustThisGood Photoshop that would be dope. No rush man. I know it takes a while to learn a lot of skill techniques and stuff. Like your work. Keep it going. 👍🏽
Nice vid, bro i have a question. The image I'm using is of a face. The subject has a stubble beard and in order to bring out that detail I changed the posterisation to 3. This makes the image separated into 3 colours; black, grey and white. I want to overlap these colours to make a detailed stencil that I will use to spray paint with. How do I create a stencil over another stencil? Thanks heaps
+Cy Dobbo Im not sure exactly what you mean by overlapping these colors, if you could provide some more detail or email me an example id be happy to help.
All good I found a way. What I was trying to say was if it was possible to separate each shade of the image when the posterisation is 3, I managed figure it out. Thanks for the reply.
NO NO NO....You draw an image on card,then you cut it out with a craft knife.then you add another stencil for the bridges etc..Next you paint an image on canvass,add the stencil.Make it humourous.Sell it for 100k plus if your name is "BANKSY".sIMPLE.tHISIS JUST A COPOUT OF REAL ART.