Create a Wallpaper for Blog Action Day

Create a Wallpaper for Blog Action Day

Tutorial Details
  • Program: Adobe Photoshop CS4 +
  • Difficulty: Advanced
  • Estimated Completion Time: 2 Hours
Download Source Files

Final Product What You'll Be Creating

Today is Blog Action Day, a day when bloggers all over the world unite to discuss a particular topic. What a lot of people may not know is that Envato founders, Collis and Cyan Ta’eed founded Blog Action Day in the summer of 2007 hoping to raise awareness about the environment. Since then, Blog Action Day has become a huge success with the participation of thousands of blogs including the White House and the UK Foreign Office. Today, Blog Action Day is being managed by the team at Change.org; the topic of this year’s event is Water.

Right now, almost a billion people on the planet don’t have access to clean, safe drinking water. That’s one in eight of us who are subject to preventable disease and even death because of something that many of us take for granted. Psdtuts has decided to help raise awareness of the issue by doing what we do best, publishing tutorials. Today’s tutorial will demonstrate how to create a wallpaper for Blog Action Day. So let’s get started!


Tutorial Assets


Step 1

Let’s start by creating a new document in Photoshop. Since the poster is not destined to print, but to be a wallpaper, the size of my document is 1920×1200 pixels at 72 px/inch of resolution. Start by filling the background with a neutral grey color (#bababa).

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Step 2

The theme is "water". So we have to introduce something that symbolizes water, of course. As it’s in my habits, I try to put in 2 contrasting elements: a glass of water in a desert landscape. Since the glass is a small object, to make it more prominent it’s important to choose the right perspective. So let’s put the glass in front of the camera, with the landscape behind. The first thing to create: the arid landscape. Let’s draw a brown (#927a60) rectangle and place it to the bottom. This rectangle represents our horizon.

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Step 3

Download the Desert Land image. I found this image on Shutterstock, but you can find tons of free photos on sites like Stock.xchng.

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Paste the image onto the main canvas and set it to overlay, so you can see how it affects the brown rectangle. If necessary, squash the image (Cmd/Ctrl + T) until you’re satisfied with the perspective (always in the area of the brown rectangle).

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Eliminate the area of the landscape that exceeds the rectangle. You can use the Rectangular marquee tool to select the area, then you can delete or mask it.

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Step 4

To fill the canvas, we can use this image of a mountain in a desert. Place it behind the rectangle.

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Step 5

Download this photo of a city in the desert and place it above the mountain’s layer. Then gently erase the sky from the photo.

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Step 6

The depth of the ground is not so evident. So grab a soft black brush and paint over the edges of the ground.

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Step 7

Let’s focus our attention on the sky: at the moment we have a flat sky but an overcast sky will work better. The user will have the impression that a storm is imminent, and this can represents a metaphor: if we don’t respect water, the situation that troubles some countries of the world will trouble the entire world, just like a moving storm.

Download this image of a cloudy sky and paste it into the canvas. With a large soft brush, erase the bottom area. Then set the layer to multiply with opacity around 80%.

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Step 8

I’m not satisfied with the clouds. To be more precise, I think the image needs more smoke effects coming from the city. For this purpose you can use 2 techniques: you can download a cloud brush set and use them to paint over the horizon, or to use the cloud filter in Photoshop. With the help of the lasso tool, with feather set on around 30px, make casual selections, then go to Filter > Render > Clouds, set the layer to multiply or screen (depending by if you want black or white smoke effects) and erase exuberant parts of the smoke. You should obtain something like this.

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Step 9

To complete the background, we need 2 adjustment layers. At first desaturate the entire image with a hue/saturation layer (Layer > New Adjustment Layers > Hue/Saturation). Reduce saturation to around -50.

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Secondly, add a gradient map layer (Layers > New Adjustment Layers > Gradient Map) going from black to white and set to overlay. Reduce the opacity if necessary. Once done, remember to select all the layers created till now, group them and title this group "background".

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Step 10

Now that the background is complete, we can introduce the focus of the composition: the glass of water. Download this image, then use the pen tool to extract the glass and drag it into the main canvas.

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Step 11

Use the Rectangular Marquee tool to select an area on top of the glass and move it up with the Direct Selection tool active.

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Step 12

With the selection still active, press Cmd/Ctrl + T to activate the transform tool and drag down the bottom-center anchor point to join the 2 parts of the glass.

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Now the glass is too long. Press Cmd/Ctrl + D to deselect, then again Cmd/Ctrl + T (this time the transformation will affect the entire glass) and reduce the height of the glass.

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Step 13

In order to eliminate the white area, set the glass’ layer to multiply.

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Then duplicate (Cmd/Ctrl + J) it and set the duplicated to screen because the inner part needs to be a little bit lighter than the external one. Reduce the layer opacity to around 30% and erase the edges with a soft (hardness 0%) brush.

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Since the edge’s opacity is too low, duplicate the layer and set it to multiply. Also notice that I’ve painted with a thin black brush over the water rim to make it more evident.

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Step 14

Create a new layer and switch its blending mode to overlay. Then set a light azure as foreground color and paint over the water. The aim of this step is to add more color to the glass, so that after the final color corrections, it will be enhanced. Remember to reduce the opacity to around 20% or the result will be too prominent.

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Step 15

To complete the glass, we have to add the shadow. So create a new layer, move it below all the glass layers and paint with a soft round black brush to create the shadow. To make the effect more realistic, use more than one layer and play with their opacities.

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Step 16

Download the child and extract him from the background. Scale him down and paint the shadow effects in a layer below as we made with the glass.

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Step 17

Since the glass is the focal point (imagine viewing the scene through a camera), the scene behind the glass should be blurred. So in the layers window, select the group of the background and the child’s layer, and press alt + Cmd/Ctrl + E to merge them in a new layer. Then apply the Gaussian blur filter.

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Add a layer mask and use a large soft black brush to paint over the area around the glass, because this area is inside the focus so it can’t be blurred.

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Step 18

It’s time to play with lights. The first thing to do is to darken the edges of the composition. So create a new layer on top, grab a large round black brush of around 1500px, set hardness to 0% and paint over the edges of the canvas. Then reduce the opacity.

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Step 19

Lights give depth to the scene. So create a new group and switch its blend mode to color dodge. Create a layer inside the group and use always a large white brush with hardness 0% to paint over the center and other areas that you want to enhance. After done, reduce the opacity so the effect won’t be excessive.

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Step 20

Type the message "For some people the glass is always half empty". The font used is Gnuolane. Immediately below another sentence, this time written using Arno Pro, which is a default font on the Mac. In case you haven’t it, you can use any serif italic font of your choice. The text is proposed with no style, because I like how it looks so simple and clean. The only style is a 1px drop shadow, just to stand out a bit the text from the background.

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Another written message is put on the bottom right, balanced by the presence of the boy on the left. The font used is Gnuolane.

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Step 21

Before starting with color corrections, we can play with a couple of textures. The first one is an old paper texture taken from the black and white grunge textures set I published on WeGraphics. Once pasted into the Photoshop document, apply a couple of times the sharpen filter so that all the details will be enhanced.

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Switch the texture to overlay with opacity 20%.

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Step 22

The second texture I’ve used is a scratched metallic texture. I like the way scratches can interact with the images, the blur background and the meaning itself of the scene. Once again paste in the metallic image, desaturate it (Cmd/Ctrl + Shift + U), set layer to multiply with opacity 30% and apply the sharpen filter.

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Step 23

The last 2 steps are color corrections. As I often do in my tutorials, let’s start reducing the saturation with a hue/saturation adjustment layer. Set the saturation level to -30.

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Finally add a gradient map layer going from red (#ee202e) to blue (#004274) to yellow (#f9e260). Set the layer to overlay with opacity 40%.

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Conclusion

That’s it! We are done. For more information on Blog Action Day, don’t forget to visit the Blog Action Day website.

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  • Patrick

    Nice tutorial.

    But, how should we proceed to do the same wallpaper in different resolutions?

    • http://wegraphics.net Sebastiano Guerriero

      Hi Patrick,

      The process of scaling down the image – since this image is 1920×1200 pixels – depends by the image itself: if there’s nothing important along the edges of the composition, you can re-size the canvas (alt+ctrl+C). In this way you will affect the canvas but not the layers, and the final result will have the desired size. Or you can directly scale down the image (alt+ctrl+I). if you modify this value, some small details will be lost, so you can apply the sharpen filter to enhance them. Using these techniques you can switch the final work to any size and create the entire wallpaper set.

  • http://twitter.com/davelucas Dave Lucas

    COOL! Thank you so much! People need to come together on this important issue! Here’s a link to my article about water. Thanks for helping us spread the word! Peaceful Blessings!

  • http://www.behance.net/mohdumer Umer

    nice and subtle…

  • http://www.twenstudio.com/ Twen Studio

    Nice Work Too Nice Effect i like it , Keep Dude!

  • lukasr

    Is it just me or did you mess up the horizon? After adding the city it is not right anymore!
    Also the blending between desert and city seems…not very smooth.

    Anyway a nice concept and apart form those points mentioned above it is very well done :)

  • ExtremRaym

    very effective !
    i love the sentence…

  • http://elenasc.wordpress.com Elena_SC

    Thanks to be Part of Blog Action Day!
    Please read and share my post about Water’s footprint in Fashion: you’d be surprised at how much impact your personal or family clothing preferences have on the environment. http://wp.me/pXsUB-oi
    You can make the difference!

  • C

    I think you kind of missed the point of what this background is supposed to accomplish: namely, meaningful action to help people like the child pictured get access to clean water – instead, he has become your ‘prop’ in a background design.

    This child, and those who share his situation, are PEOPLE. Not stock images, not symbols of poverty, not things to be manipulated to garner public support. How is the situation of those billion people supposed to sustainably improve if we can’t even give them the dignity of a name, a story, a background?

    Whether you knew it or not, you’re helping to perpetuate ‘poverty porn,’ manipulating images and people to create your own narrative of helplessness. And the fact that this tutorial can’t even acknowledge (beyond a few sentences at the beginning) the issue it’s supposed to be focusing on just makes it that much worse.

    I would encourage you to learn more about this phenomena and ways you can avoid it – here are a few places to start:
    -http://waterwellness.ca/perspectives-of-poverty/
    -http://aidthoughts.org/?p=69
    -http://www.owen.org/blog/3018

    -c

    • http://lordlouis.deviantart.com bisM

      Very interesting comment indeed, I haven’t heard of poverty porn before.
      Interesting read, thanks for sharing.

    • mic

      It’s just a well-done poster to sensitize the people, It has a great message. I understand your reasons and your objective with this comment… but really, I think this poster is not offensive, is not porn. In my opinion it shares a great truth and has a great communicative power.

      Thank you for sharing those interesting articles, but the final result of the tutorial has rembered me that in our society, in our World, there are people that need a big help and people who can provide this help. Please, friends, donate! https://donate.water.org/

  • http://www.ingbase.com Mayur

    This is an amazing tutorial.

  • http://slayyou2.deviantart.com/ Emmanuel Umukoro

    lol why did you add the mountain layer and immediately after cover it with the city image? that makes no sense at all!

    • http://slayyou2.deviantart.com/ Emmanuel Umukoro

      woops!! I take it back! the mountain image wasn’t completely useless you used the sky from the mountains.

  • http://www.17ps8.com peter

    good scene

  • http://maarij.com mo3ath

    “Download the child…”

    Oo

  • http://konccepts.com/blog/ subhamay

    what a job. thank you bro. very nice work. thanks again.

  • http://www.designhamper.com DesignHamper

    Good message for the messenger.

  • http://www.mihaomejc.com Miha

    Nice work! I have one question: what is the best option to gently erase the sky from the photo?

  • http://www.fasalsalam.com fasalsalam

    very effective

  • http://www.vaporizerkits.com Zephyr Ion

    I like the fact that the image shows the afflictions of the child.

  • http://www.surfaceblur.com SurfaceBlur

    I truly wish I had that kind of talent. Great Image. Even given all those source images, never would have come up with that. Awesome!

  • suman dutta

    awasome work dude…………………………

  • http://www.photobirdy.co.uk lewis carter

    i don’t understand step16 and step17. would you please explain more clearly

  • Andras Endre

    Amazing tutorial. I’ve learned a lot. Thank you!

  • http://www.naryak.com yakthai

    nice work!!

  • http://www.everestmap.com Nilshek

    gr8 steps and gr8 job n i liked most of it sentences and sense…. thnxx

  • Baimai

    I want to know for a long time how to change color tone.

    Thanks a lot. ;)

  • http://www.tutoriallounge.com Tutorial Lounge

    beautiful message you conveying through this tutorial. thanks

  • adam

    this is really nice, i love it keep up the good work

  • http://www.london-freeads.co.uk Daniel

    I actually did it, the result is not like yours, but it’s a start.