![]() ![]() ![]() Leave the Radius value set to 1 pixel and click OK to close out of the filter's dialog box. Step 5: Press Shift+Alt+D (Win) / Shift+Option+D (Mac) to change the blend mode to Color Dodge. Step 4: Press Ctrl+I (Win) / Command+I (Mac) to invert the layer. Step 3: Press Ctrl+J (Win) / Command+J (Mac) to duplicate the desaturated layer. Step 2: Press Shift+Ctrl+U (Win) / Shift+Command+U (Mac) to desaturate the layer. Step 1: With the photo newly opened in Photoshop, press Ctrl+J (Win) / Command+J (Mac) to duplicate the Background layer. Photo To Sketch In 60 Seconds Or LessĪs promised at the beginning of the tutorial, here's how to create this same photo to sketch effect in 60 seconds or less, using keyboard shortcuts for most of the work! Before you begin, make sure the Move Tool is selected at the top of the Tools panel, otherwise some of the keyboard shortcuts won't work. The final colorized "photo to sketch" effect. Here's the photo I'll be starting with, which comes to us from the Fotolia image library: You'll find the Photoshop Elements version of this tutorial here. So as an added bonus for those already familiar with the previous tutorial, at the end of this one, we'll learn how to create the entire sketch effect from beginning to end in 60 seconds or less! As before, I'll be using Photoshop CS5 throughout this tutorial but any recent version will work. ![]() It's really just one change in one of the steps that makes all the difference. If you've already read through the previous Portrait To Sketch tutorial, you'll find that most of the steps here are the same. In this tutorial, we'll learn a slightly different way to convert a photo to a sketch that's usually better suited for these other types of images since it often does an amazing job of bringing out fine details. Sometimes though, when working with other types of images like landscape or nature photos, buildings and architecture, still lifes, or really any image that doesn't focus on people, you'll want the sketch to include those tiny details the previous technique would ignore. In a previous Photoshop tutorial, we learned how to convert a photo into a sketch using a technique that works great with portraits, since it tends to leave out small, unwanted details like wrinkles and other skin blemishes while focusing more on the general features we want to see in the sketch, like a person's eyes, nose and lips. ![]()
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