View Full Version : Photoshop help
The Lone Rider
11th November 2008, 17:48
I think this will be a quick fix,
but how do you do text in photoshop that is rounded this...
http://www.legendaryusa.com/v/vspfiles/photos/M652-2T.jpg
HRT
11th November 2008, 18:20
Open word, click Insert -> Picture -> Wordart
Select it, copy it, paste it in Photoshop :)
As for actually doing it in photoshop I'm not sure.
hospitalfood
11th November 2008, 18:26
in photoshop CS.
beside the font colour box on the toolbar at the top of page, is a box with a T inside it and a curved line underneath the T.
click this and play my friend
you may need to select the text tool first from the toolbar on the left
The Lone Rider
11th November 2008, 18:27
THanks for the suggestion.. but it didnt seem to let me copy the word art box into photoshop!
hospitalfood
11th November 2008, 18:28
Open word, click Insert -> Picture -> Wordart
Select it, copy it, paste it in Photoshop :)
As for actually doing it in photoshop I'm not sure.
dont think you can do this.
The Lone Rider
11th November 2008, 18:28
ok ill try that
NighthawkNZ
11th November 2008, 18:29
something to with Paths... and attaching the text to the path...
The Lone Rider
11th November 2008, 18:30
Got it going. Thanks very much.!
hospitalfood
11th November 2008, 18:35
sweet..........
The Lone Rider
11th November 2008, 18:53
Ok, how do I do a black background with the same curve?, haha..
ie.. a curved bar under ride hard ride free.
Trying to make a poster logo or use for doing rockers later
Headbanger
11th November 2008, 19:10
Make a new layer, draw a shape on it, fill it with colour, position layer under the text layer,Select free transform and manipulate to suit.
FlangMasterJ
11th November 2008, 19:35
Use InDesign, Freehand or Illustrator.
The Lone Rider
11th November 2008, 19:53
Use InDesign, Freehand or Illustrator.
No I'm afraid the question was how to do it in Photoshop
And none of those programs listed I have ever had any training to do the stuff I can do in photoshop. Just escaped my mind how to do these curved bits with text and make them look good.
NighthawkNZ
11th November 2008, 20:17
I would agree that a vector appilcation like CorelDRAW, Freehand, Illustrator is a hell of lot easier (and probably quicker) to design and then you can use the template features...
being vector you don't have to worry about transparent backgrounds and feathering edges to get that clean look... Text is crisper, and for simple designs like that files sizes probably a heck of lot smaller
The Lone Rider
11th November 2008, 21:15
Thanks for the info, I'll try what I can on photoshop for now.
Big Dave
11th November 2008, 22:58
Thanks for the info, I'll try what I can on photoshop for now.
I do magazine layouts entirely in photoshop sometimes.
Illustrator only as a last resort. And then only if it needs blends and complex paths.
I still liked the quark interface better than ID too. Obviously not the capability, but the two pointer thing has never worked as well for me.
BuellBunny
12th November 2008, 13:05
I would still have done the logo in Illustrator.... so much easier. Then import it into Photoshop for any stuff you cant do in Illustrator... usually works for me.
Text in Photshop is a pain in the bum, especially following paths... mind you I have never done that in Photoshop....
NighthawkNZ
12th November 2008, 13:36
I do magazine layouts entirely in photoshop sometimes.
Illustrator only as a last resort. And then only if it needs blends and complex paths.
I still liked the quark interface better than ID too. Obviously not the capability, but the two pointer thing has never worked as well for me.
I never liked Quark... (i should uninstall it really has been used in a couple of years) and much preferned InDesign, heck even PageMaker... I have done full magazine and newspaper layouts in CorelDraw, ( i use corel for 99% of design) but it is closely linked with CorelPaint and the two work together...
I prefer Freehand to Illustrator as I find AI interface clumbsy and out dated, as well as ilogical for the menus...
But thats just me... Its what ever works for you... All have there advantages, and disadvantages... Same with working in Rastor over Vector
Big Dave
12th November 2008, 14:33
I never like Quark... (i should uninstall it really has been used in a couple of years) and much preferned InDesign, heck even PageMaker... I have done full magazine and newspaper layouts in CorelDraw, ( i use corel for 99% of design) but it is closely linked with CorelPaint and the two work together...
I prefer Freehand to Illustrator as I fin AI interface clumbsy and out dated, as well as ilogical for the menus...
But thats just me... Its what ever works for you... All have there advantages, and disadvantages... Same with working in Rastor over Vector
I should have said single page layouts.
I miss freehand. If there is a plan to draw or schematic to do I'll still crank up the G4 and use FH8.
NighthawkNZ
12th November 2008, 14:54
I should have said single page layouts.
I miss freehand. If there is a plan to draw or schematic to do I'll still crank up the G4 and use FH8.
I was going to ask about the single page thing but guessed that's what you meant... I only have PS Version 7 and not CS so I could have been wrong. ;)
I use CorelDraw and Paint as one application, transfering between the two is pretty much seem less... At the end of the day it comes down to personal preference, and I have been a Corel User since version 3 (actually if I look hard enough I may still have the floppies... though no floppy drive to install :lol:
I did like Freehand MX but since Adobe bought Macromedia I haven't looked at what they have bloated it to...
While we recognize FreeHand has a loyal customer base, we encourage users to migrate to the new Adobe Illustrator CS3
:( and I not like Illustrator
The Lone Rider
12th November 2008, 14:58
I've just been using photoshop since I was like.. I dunno.. 7 years old? I guess pretty much since the first version maybe. Never really paid much attention in all the computer graphics classes I've taken during summer camp and in high school.
As the user name implies, I like to do my own thing
The Lone Rider
12th November 2008, 19:28
Hahaha, this is amazingly immature but hope someone gets the humour of it.
*Sigh*... another tragedy to the small minds amused by small things syndrome
Creativity is fun(ny)...
Dave-
13th November 2008, 12:21
I've used photoshop for everything...i mean everything, dabbled with illustrator but like the bigger dave only used it if i had to.
edit that's slightly a lie, also used after effects for anything video.
Big Dave
13th November 2008, 13:20
dabbled with illustrator
There is a heap of funky stuff - image nozzles and custom brushes and stuff like that are cool, but there is not much professional application for that sort of vector eye candy - beyond signage.
Where Live trace is now and turning raster into vector is real handy too.
It's the clunkiness of the tools and menus that is the biatch
NighthawkNZ
13th November 2008, 13:32
There is a heap of funky stuff - image nozzles and custom brushes and stuff like that are cool, but there is not much professional application for that sort of vector eye candy - beyond signage.
I use a little bit of the funky eye candy stuff in the page layouts... but not alot... most of my page layouts are mix of rastor and vector anyhow
Where Live trace is now and turning raster into vector is real handy too.
I love CorelTrace... it has saved me hours and hours... and hours of work :) Manual tracing is a right royal Be Eye Itch
It's the clunkiness of the tools and menus that is the biatch
Thats what I hated about Illustrator as well... :mellow:
I've used photoshop for everything...
We don't accept rastor bitmaps at work it has to be in vector... it gives the cleanest print for our printing process...
Just a question to you PS guru's... Can photoshop export out as a vector...??
Big Dave
13th November 2008, 13:49
Just a question to you PS guru's... Can photoshop export out as a vector...??
Save as photoshop .eps and include vector data - then distill.
The raster parts are still dots but fonts etc are pathed.
SpikedPunch
13th November 2008, 13:50
Just a question to you PS guru's... Can photoshop export out as a vector...??
You can export paths in photoshop to .ai files. File>export>paths to illustrator
Bit clunky though. I'd rather just draw in illustrator. For illustrations I only use photoshop for colouring, and only then if I'm feeling lazy or want a specific look I can't achieve in illustrator. You can do so much with the mesh tool and gradients etc... But I am a big nerd for vectors. Saves grief with printing later on :)
Big Dave
13th November 2008, 15:56
Yeah and you can drag and drop 'smart objects' - vector files that are embedded in the psd and include the vector data in the output file.
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