Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Simple Roy Lichtenstein Style in Photoshop

A tutorial by Fabio Sasso, a designer from Porto Alegre, Brazil. Playing with the Halftone filter in Photoshop and the Width Tool in Illustrator CS 5 he creates an image inspired by Roy Lichtenstein and documents all the steps in this well illustrated guide.





Friday, February 19, 2010

Those Hidden Accent Characters

How to easily input hundreds of hidden accent characters and symbols on Mac OS X keyboards..  A nice overview and tutorial of various character pallets, keyboard viewers and input methods from Elizabeth Pyatt.


Thursday, February 18, 2010

Roy Lichtenstein Halftone Patterns

A step by step halftone tutorial using Photoshop to mimic Roy Lichtenstein by Melissa Clifton

If you are a fan of pop art then you're probably already well acquainted with the work Roy Lichtenstein. Roy Lichtenstein became one of the leading pop artists of the sixties with his comic-strip paintings. Drowning Girl 1963, is one of his better known works and is a good example of the design features in his most famous pieces. Thick lines, bold colors, and thought bubble. His work also often included boxed captions and words such as "WHAAM!", commonly found in comic books.

Benday dots were Lichtenstein's trademark. Benday dots are a printing process which combines two (or more) different small, coloured dots to create a third colour. Back in the day, pulp comic books used benday dots in primary colours to inexpensively create the secondary colours such as flesh tone.

You can create the benday dot effect by using the Colour Halftone filter found in Adobe Photoshop, however in this tutorial I'm going to show you a way to create a fantastic looking black and white Halftone Pattern.