Learn How to Create a Fiery Demon Montage
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In this tutorial, we’ll be creating a photo montage of a demon destroying a city using only stock photos and of course Photoshop. What are we waiting for? Lets get started!
Final Image Preview
Here’s what we’ll be creating. Want access to the full PSD files and downloadable copies of every tutorial, including this one? Join Psdtuts+ PLUS today! You can view the final image preview below or view a larger version here.
Video Tutorial
Overview – What Are We Using?
We’ll only be using 4 stock photo’s to achieve the final image outcome. And here they are:
- Our Demon is courtesy of http://sxc.hu.
- A great pair of wings is courtesy of =nightgraue over at DeviantART.
- Our explosions are courtesy of Wikipedia.
- The backdrop is courtesy of http://sxc.hu.
Now that we’ve got our ingredients, fire up PhotoShop and we’ll get cooking (ha get it? sigh!).
Step 1
Create a new document that’s 950px wide and 1200px high. Drag in our cityscape image and position it so it looks good. Navigate to the curves tool located at Image > Adjustments > Curves (Command + M). Now give the backdrop a dark red glow (this will make our explosion look real when we get to that step). To do this, you’ll need to darken the overall RGB a touch. Increase the red. Then lower the green (a little bit) and the blue a fair bit. Here’s what I’ve got so far, hopefully you’re on the same track.

Step 2
Now it’s time for the demon to start taking shape. Import the stocks of the man and the wings. Next, position the man so he is a bit higher than the bottom of the canvas. Now, resize and re-position the two demon wings using the Transform tool by going to Edit > Free Transform (Command + T). You’ll want to put the wings so they connect on his shoulder blades, this will give it a more anatomically correct look, again adding to the realism. If you’re still following correctly, you should have something that resembles the image below.

Step 3
This is the where we start blending. More specifically, we want the wings to look attached to the man’s back. To do this, grab a nice soft, round, 50px brush, with the color set to black #000000, Hardness at 0%, and Opacity at around 30. Once you’ve got that, create a layer mask on each of the wings. To do this, first you need to click on the layer containing one of the wings, then click the Layer Mask icon at the bottom of the layers palette, see the first image below for an example result.
To have a more precise looking blend, you should click, not just click and drag, that way you can choose how much you want taken away from the wing. Note: don’t worry if you think it doesn’t look right yet. We’re going to make it look even better with some more curves in the next step.

Step 4
This step is very easy. It’s just a simple little adjustment, but we’ll be using levels this time, instead of curves. First, group together both the wings and the man. That way they’ll all be on the same layer. To do this you Command-click on each layer you want to merge, then right-click and select > Merge Layers. Simple eh? To add the levels adjustment layer, you will first need to select the layer we’re working with, then head to Layer > New Adjustment Layer > Levels. You will then see this dialogue box shown below.

Call it what you like, it doesn’t really matter, then hit OK. Now we need to make it darker (but not too dark, since we’ll be going even darker later). Do keep it vibrant though. To do this edit the levels by moving the three little sliders to this position indicated below.

Step 5
Let’s develop the demon some more. To do this, we’ll add some realistic shadows to it. Create a new layer between your man, and your adjustments layer (in this position the shadows will appear darker, requiring less work). Now you need to select a brush that is 60px wide, 0% Hardness, 25% Opacity and has 40% Flow.
Now use this brush to draw the shadows. Keep in mind that our light source will eventually come from the top left of the picture, meaning you’ll want more shadows on the demons’ right hand side, and under the left wing. Another good place to add shadows is the bottoms of the wings, as well as the tops of the wings. All marked below. Once you’re done you should end up with something resembling the image below.

Step 6
This step is all about the explosion! We’ll leave the demon as it is for now, and come back to it soon. But first we need to tackle our explosion! If you open and import your explosion, you’ll see it’s not the easiest thing to work with, as it has many different colors. It also has a combination of soft and sharp edges, which would sink the hearts of even the best Photoshop gurus. So what do we do? Well, I’ll let you in on a little secret of mine: When in doubt – Rub it out! (badaboom boom).
That’s right, we’re going to use the eraser. All you need to do is grab the eraser and using a nice 80px soft brush at 100% opacity we’re going to get rid of the surrounding area of the explosions. Then take a softer opacity brush, say around 60% with a flow of 100 still, and go gently around the explosion’s.
Your last step is to neaten them up using a smaller brush (around 50px) and a lower opacity (around 40%). Then rub away. Eventually you’ll have something which looks like the results in the animated GIF below. All in all, it took me two minutes to cut out these explosions, and they now look good. The last thing you’ve got to do is seperate each explosion into it’s own layer, using either the Pen tool, the lasso tool, or the marquee tool. Whichever you’re more comfortable with.

Step 7
Now that we have our three explosions cut out and separated into individual layers (they don’t have to be perfectly cut out, because we’ll amend any bad bits using the Clone Stamp in the next step). All that’s left is to put them together. First, you need to pick a spot to blow up. I chose the top left hand corner for this tutorial. So I’ll stick them up there. Next you need to position them and resize them accordingly using the Free Transform tool again. Once that’s done you should have something like the image below.

Step 8
Now that you’re happy you will need to do some stamping! Grab the clone stamp tool. I know many of you know how to clone stamp, but I’ll go through it quickly for anyone who doesn’t. All you do when using this tool is find somewhere you want to copy/sample and Alt click it. Then you just normal click where you want that sample to copy too. For the best results, I recommend using a 0% hard brush. Just because it comes out way better.
With the Clone Stamp tool in hand, you want to achieve a very nice looking natural explosion. The beauty of this step is no explosion is ever the same, they’re all very different. And that’s what sets your picture apart from the rest.
As you can see, my final effect (after 10 minutes of clone stamping) is much lighter than the original explosions. This is because I focussed more on the white area’s. And I also added a nice little layer that just contained some white soft brush strokes set to Color Dodge. You may want to try the same thing. I also erased some of the explosion that covered the buildings. This makes the explosion feel distant and gives your image a depth of field. You might want to try that as well.

Step 9
This step involves two things. First, you have to do a curves adjustment on your explosion (if you think it will look better, no harm in trying). So select your explosions layers one by one and change the curves. For my example, I lowered the red, and increased the blue and RGB to lighten it all up. The image below shows the effect after tinkering with the curves.

The second thing this step involves is selecting a large (100+) soft, bright, orange brush and brushing behind (and on if you like) the explosion. This adds realism to the explosion, as an explosion gives out light. To do this create a new layer (Command + Shift + N) behind the explosion and fill it with bright orange.
What you do now is again click the Layer Mask Icon and this time fill the layer mask with black. You should see no orange anymore. Now select a brush size of well over 100px. Then with Hardness set too 0, Opacity to 40% and the color set to white – brush away.

Step 10
It’s time to turn the city orange! This will add to the explosion ten-fold, and make it look super cool. Create a new adjustment layer (Layer > New Adjustment Layer > Levels) above the orange background you just created. And change the settings to what I have set below. Or play around with it yourself and see what looks good, what looks bad, and learn from it. It’s such a great tool.

Step 11
Create a new layer above every other layer. Press Command + Shift + E. This will merge everything into a new layer. Now set this layer to Soft Light at 100% Opacity (lower it if wanted). This should give your image some pop.
Step 12
We’re nearly done! All we need to do now is some extensive coloring. I’ll take my time on this step so everyone understands.
What we’re going to do here is study where the light is coming from, and then decide where we need to start painting. It’s all hand labour from here (it’s easy and can be done with a mouse). Okay, so create a new layer above our levels layer (the most recently made one). Fill this with another bright orange (I used #ff6c00). Then click on the quick mask icon again with this layer selected. Now you’ll want to get yourself a decent sized brush (25px or so) with 0 Hardness, and 40% Flow and Opacity. Select the color white.
Before you start painting! Look at this diagram below. I’ve already created my adjustments layer, and done a little bit of painting. I’ve outlined where you will need to paint based on the light source.
- Obviously you will need to paint over the explosion. It’s pretty much the more the better here. I’d focus more on the bottom (as it’s coming through the buildings) to add realism.
- The back drop needs to pretty much be all lightly covered in an orange tinge, this will help the explosion look like it is actually there and not just pasted in.
- Here we have the tops of the wings on the right. The light will be very vibrant here when you’re finished (grab yourself a smaller brush and focus on this area). The closer to the top of the wing you get, the brighter you should be getting. This gives it a natural flow.
- Repeat the previous step on the other side.
- 5 is the back. Note that the left wing will be casting a shadow over the back, so make sure you create an abrupt end to the orange (around the bottom of where 5 is written – along the line). You will then want to focus more light onto the ridge of the demon’s right shoulder blade because that’s where the light will hit the most on the back.
- Detail is key here. Use a mall brush and zoom in closely! You want to be right in close to the fingers. Once there, you want to treat each finger as if it were the tops of the wings on three and four, getting brighter as you reach the top ridge of each finger. If you get this detail right, you’ll make the picture stand out. It’s the detail that makes the final picture great.

Conclusion
I spent a good hour getting the shadows and lighting just right. If your blending, clone-stamping, or levels are bad, then it won’t matter if you nail the lighting and shadows. And doing them correctly will add so much more realism to the montage than you would think.
Experiment with anything you didn’t understand or feel confident with. It’ll all come naturally over time. To finish the design, I added some text and branding. You can view the final image below or view a larger version here.
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Bäm! I like it very much
great tut!
:D very nice tut!..
very good
there arent many tuts on psdtuts like this one
dang, amazing tut.well done
Nice, its a movie poster ;)
greetz
http://www.opensourcehunter.com
I think the tutorial is well explained, but the outcome looks average.
You should blend the fire a bit better, and add hard and small highlights on the scuplture, so you reinforce the silhouette.
yeh u r rite… bt over all itz nice…
agreed but the fact that the renders he used were low quality also doesnt help
Nice Tutorial Kieran, Thanks for sharing !!
a demon with angel wings? causing explosions by folding hands behind his head? thats the freedom of the artist i guess… I also dont mind that the explosion doesnt look realistic at all – but why should a lightsource in front of an object cause reflections on its backside???
Im sorry folks, but for the first time one of your tuts totally suck!
Not bad but not that good either, sorry. Great tut though!
sorry 4 my hard words, please remove my previous comment!
why did you put fire on those buildings?
Great lighting! Good work, once again
good job of lighting, but the wings are upside down
Sorry, it’s rather outcome.
poor outcome*
Nice, tut, but i’ve seen much better here on PSDTUTS…
Someway some how reminds me Max Payne =)
Nicely done,
Congrats
Im really surprised that this tutorial made it on PSDTUTS.
Great work.
Love it!
Quite easy.
Not bad, I would have chosen a better picture for the explosion/blended it better.
Not bad – what font is that?
Tracked back to from here: http://www.presidiacreative.com/web-picks-8/
Nice work! I like it.
We are just spoiled on Tuts :D It’s great learning material, but yea, the fire is bad.
Actually I go dead at the 2nd. explanation.. Where you have to import the guy and the wings, because Im not totally sure how he makes the guy+wings so dark? I tired to desaturate the pictures but without much success..
This is kind of amateur don’t you think?
I am trying it myself i just found out that clone tool is most awesome tool!
no kiddin!
Are you guys serious? This is absolutely terrible!
“…we’ll be creating a photo montage of a demon destroying a city using only stock photos and of course Photoshop. ”
The demon uses stock photos and PS to destroy the city? I knew Photoshop was powerful, but not this powerful. And I’ll be sure not to leave any stock photos lying around where demons can get at them.
great tutorial
and thanks a ton for providing the links because some of us dont want to pay $10 a month for this site
The fire looks aweful, but I like the statue.
lol @Jeffster83 =D
this is great… love it….
I want more of that plaese….thanks
jp
Last couple of tutorials have been well below the quality level of the site. While not a bad tutorial per se, it seems like it would have been better suited for an artist interview explaining his techniques.
The outcome is mediocre…I agree with SOSFactory, the fire/explosion should have been blended better…but I do like the shadowing and highlighting on the demon character.
Thanks for the tut!
I can’t even begin to point out the suck in this one. I can’t help but be rude on this one.
these tutorials should only act as a guide, a base to further deviate on and experiment.
Looks like the demon or angel is like, “shit, what have i done now, i am going to be in so much trouble” since he has the hands over his head like this.
i don’t like this tut, i just don’t see the use for it. but i do like the lighting explanation. good stuff!
for the first time im disapointed at a tut..
Thanks for this, it’s just gave some lighting ideas, but the only thing that should be done better in this tutorial, is the left wings lights, i think that the lights are too much connected with the explosion lights and doesn’t give you a real “sense” to profondity.. hope you understand what I mean.
To Envato:
So when te big FLATUTS.com will be lunched? Think that many people waiting for it…
Tip: you could also start a forum :) for tuts sites…
call 9-1-1-P-H-O-T-O-S-H-O-P !!
this is murder.
1. The buildings nearby the explosion should have been highlighted because they’re closer to the cheesy light source.
2. “‘Our explosions’ are courtesy of Wikipedia.” = So PSDTUTS are your favorite website?
3. “Regret” = Very ironic and clever.
And I might regret this comment.
Nah. Just keeping it cool. I loved your attempt, sometimes PSDTUTS just needs to remind us that everyone can make a tutorial and get a hundred dollars.
Cheers
agreeing with geir b nystad.
I liked it;
Is there anybody who is unliked?
10x for your sharing…
Why are you so nasty, folks? Do it better and make a tut yourself if you CAN do better.
great tut 2 :)
http://afrix99.deviantart.com/
Nice tutorial i was wondering like you have referenced the image creators and sources of the actual images. A nice way to say thanks to the originators of the images. Great work and good detailed tutorial
wow this is so great!! i love it!
PSDTUTS should post more tuts high quality like this!
@Troy. No they should be cool and worth wanting to recreate. That then makes their steps worth testing out.