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Old 05-11-2013, 07:58 AM   #13221
Rusty100 Rusty100 is offline
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went and did all 3 movies in this style





Last edited by crazyBLUE; 05-14-2013 at 01:27 AM. Reason: added spoiler
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Old 05-11-2013, 11:11 AM   #13222
Cactus Cactus is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rusty100 View Post
went and did all 3 movies in this style
[Show spoiler]




Fantastic stuff! I really like that stripped down style.

Last edited by crazyBLUE; 05-11-2013 at 11:37 AM. Reason: added spoiler
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Old 05-11-2013, 11:35 AM   #13223
rybev rybev is offline
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Polite reminder - please use Spolier Tags when quoting images especially multiple images. Otherwise it just takes ages for the screen to load and wastes space.
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Old 05-11-2013, 04:23 PM   #13224
brahm brahm is offline
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Maybe TinyPic resized them. They are 1762 on my computer. They were larger but I thought you wanted the 1762 size. Haha I'll try and scan them again tomorrow when I get more time.
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Old 05-11-2013, 09:41 PM   #13225
G:Box G:Box is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rusty100 View Post
went and did all 3 movies in this style
[Show spoiler]






re: crazyblue - the forum resizes them automatically did it really need to be spoiler tagged
Some of your best work Rusty.

I would spread the data in the back for part 2.

It looks kind cramped up top with alot space on the bottom.
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Old 05-12-2013, 12:35 AM   #13226
BasedSPACER BasedSPACER is online now
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I was finally able to find this film at Walmart in a $7 bin full of random Blu's and noticed that the cover art seemed a bit outdated considering it was released in 2006 on Blu. So of course I decided to whip up a custom cover art for one of my favorite films. If you wish to download a printable version shoot over a PM.


EDIT: Made an alternate version for those that want an updated cover only with the original front cover.

Last edited by BasedSPACER; 05-12-2013 at 03:43 AM.
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Old 05-12-2013, 04:59 AM   #13227
Scorpion Soldier Scorpion Soldier is online now
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Working on matching slipcovers for the Marvel films at. Did a test for the spines. Here's what I have so far:

Each movie is also labeled with the phase, Phase 1 is for example labeled "Marvel Cinematic Universe – Phase One: Avengers Assembled". Phase 2 is currently "United They Stand" as a placeholder since the phase doesn't have a name yet.
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Old 05-12-2013, 05:02 AM   #13228
Branden8791 Branden8791 is offline
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My third set of custom disney blu ray covers once again..i'm not creating just tossing ideas out for anyone who may want to take up this type style for them

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Old 05-12-2013, 10:19 AM   #13229
Nissen Nissen is offline
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Hi guys.

I was asked by a member how I got the "inked" look to my Reel Heroes covers, so I decided to describe the long, tedious process here. It's been a while since I did a long-winded write-up on one of my covers, so I think you'll forgive one now.

BTW, love how you all "whip up" covers, or "I decided to put one together since I had a lunch break anyway". For me it takes hours upon hours.

So here goes:

Ideally, the drawn effect would be created by manually tracing a photo and hand-colouring everything. This is very time-consuming, and frankly, requires an experienced illustrator's hand to look good. (The actual Reel Heroes covers are done by hand, with varying degrees of success.)

For my series of Avengers Phase One covers I couldn't afford the time to do every panel by hand, so I sought out a filter to do it for me. There are many good commercial filters that give a robust hand-drawn look, but I couldn't find one that matched specifically what I was after. (and some of those filters are plain out of my price-range.)

Bearing in mind that I had to apply the comic-book look to 7 or 8 images for each cover, both the main figure and the background panels, I wanted an automated approach. I first thought I could automate this entire process with a Photoshop Action, but no such luck. Each step in my process needed hand tinkering. I experimented quite a bit, and you can see some progress between my first Iron Man and the last Avengers cover.

In the end the procedure was mainly this:

Step 1: The linework.
(Make a copy of the original image first. You will need an untouched version for later stages.)
First I used the standard Poster Edges filter to do the heavy lifting. The settings all varied from image to image, but generally I went for a strong line. That filter also creates a lot of noise in darker areas, so it will have to be cleaned up by hand. You sometimes get a better result if you "clean up" the image before applying the Poster Edges filter, using the Surface Blur tool at various settings. Experimentation is the key.

I then used the Color Range selection tool (Under "Select") to make a selection of only the black in the image. I copied that selection to a separate layer so I would have an isolated version of the black outlines created by the Poster Edges filter. Then I went in and manually erased (with a layer mask in my case) all the noisy bits. I also cleaned up some of the rougher edges at this point. Here is where a pen tablet comes in handy.

Cleaning up the Poster Edges outlines got me only so far, so I drew additional outlines by hand, usually the mouth, tracing the jawline and creases in clothes and other areas I felt needed some enhancements.

I then used the Stroke function to add a slightly thicker outline to the contours of the figure. This only works if you've isolated the figure on a transparent layer or you can easily select it against a simple background. Otherwise you'll have to draw that outline by hand as well.

That takes care of the linework.

Step 2: The hashes, or crosshatches.
I did two things here. First I made a copy of the black only layer I isolated from the "Poster Edges" process. I then applied a Motion Blur filter to it at about a 30-40 degree angle. I then used the Sharpen or Sharpen More filters repeatedly to make the motion blur look like tiny lines. Then I masked the entire layer and went in with the eraser to bring out these small hatches in shadow areas, creases in the clothes and face, and I also used it to feather the edges of large black areas.

Second, I found an image of speed lines from a Manga tutorial and overlaid that on my image, set it to multiply and again masked off the entire layer. Again I could go in with my eraser and bring out these speedlines where I wanted them. Please note I rotated the speed lines to match the angle of the "Motion Blur Lines" I created in the previous step. You could also angle this layer perpendicular to the other hashes and get a crosshatch effect, or apply this same Speed Line layer twice at different angles.

Step 3: The colours.
Here you go back to the copy of the original image and apply any filters you think will give the painted or drawn look. I used a combination of the Dry Brush filter (good for hair and facial details) and the Cutout filter at different settings. I applied the filters on separate copies of the main image, stacked them on top of each other and used the Opacity slider to find a good combination. Sometimes I just used the Dry Brush filter because the Cutout filter is too recognisable.
Most times the colours benefitted from a strong saturation increase to give them that comic book pop. I applied that as a separate Adjustment Layer so I could control it better.

Step 4. Season to taste.

Note that I don't apply any colour halftone or raster effects which every tutorial out there emphasises so heavily. Comics have been printed with excellent colours for the last fifty years so that dotty look is just a throwback to a slightly insulting stereotype of what the "Comic Book Look" is. Comic art is neither simplistic or coarse any more, so it's time the aesthetic prejudice caught up.

Here is a close-up of the Captain America linework:


Hey Presto!
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Old 05-12-2013, 05:04 PM   #13230
Graves0777 Graves0777 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RebelPrince1986 View Post
Thanks for the feedback! I've decided against adding a background as I'd like them to stay as simple as possible. I've made a bit more progress and have decided to make these Blu-ray exclusive, so I have excluded any mention of it being a combo pack. I know that some people like including their DVD copy, but for the sake of this collection, and because I personally remove the DVD's and give them away, I will be pretending as if they were never released with a DVD copy in the first place.



I think I'm almost done with this one, just need to find the remaining logos and a rating badge.

I've never printed a custom cover before, does anyone know the exact measurements to send to print? I will be putting them in the standard 1 or 2 disc Disney cases (Vortex?)
Really love this. Hope you continue and make a series of Disney covers as I would definitely use them
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Old 05-12-2013, 06:04 PM   #13231
jfcarbel jfcarbel is offline
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Default how to make text blend into image?

I am starting to experiment with making my own covers and one technique I am not knowledgable about is how to make text inserted onto cover not stand out but rather blend.

I notice if you just drop text into an image, expecially a dark background and white text that it stands out.

What is best Photoshop technique for this?
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Old 05-12-2013, 08:39 PM   #13232
Thomas Guycott Thomas Guycott is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jfcarbel View Post
I am starting to experiment with making my own covers and one technique I am not knowledgable about is how to make text inserted onto cover not stand out but rather blend.

I notice if you just drop text into an image, expecially a dark background and white text that it stands out.

What is best Photoshop technique for this?
While I won't claim that my method is the best, what I usually do is start by creating the text in a separate file, as large as possible, with anti-aliasing set to "smooth." Then I crop, rasterize, resize and C&P the image into the main file. In my experience that gives the text clear definition without having that too-crisp "MS Paint" look.
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Old 05-13-2013, 01:36 AM   #13233
Schrute Farms Schrute Farms is offline
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Quote:
Scorpion Soldier Working on matching slipcovers for the Marvel films at. Did a test for the spines. Here's what I have so far:

Each movie is also labeled with the phase, Phase 1 is for example labeled "Marvel Cinematic Universe – Phase One: Avengers Assembled". Phase 2 is currently "United They Stand" as a placeholder since the phase doesn't have a name yet.
Very Cool Scorpion! I would prefer a pic of Nick Fury instead of Coulson on the Avengers spine, but I love the theme so far!

My OCD will hate this in the future, because will I organize them by Phase or by superhero?
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Old 05-13-2013, 05:10 AM   #13234
Willdta Willdta is offline
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wanted to post this since it was originally from this thread. i took nissens cover art for Total Recall and made it into a slipcover, the ghostbusters artwork is from designer matthew Ferguson.

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Old 05-13-2013, 06:17 AM   #13235
Willdta Willdta is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Imrahil2001 View Post
Looks like you used my Last Starfighter too.
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Old 05-13-2013, 08:15 AM   #13236
gregmasciola gregmasciola is offline
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Finally finished my Great Escape cover. I chose to go with a simple/less is more design. I'd say the hardest part was choosing which pictures to use. There are so many characters, but there's just not enough room for them all. I chose to put Richard Attenborough on the spine because he's always been my favorite character in this movie. The cover's available for download at euphoricfx.org.

[Show spoiler]
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Old 05-13-2013, 02:57 PM   #13237
bludism bludism is offline
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Hey guys! I purchased pirates of the Caribbean the curse of the black pearl Blu-ray combo-pack, but receive the dvd Blu-ray pack. I have tried to find a Blu-ray cover, but can’t find a scan of the combo-pack one. Does anyone have a scan they could send me? Also are there any custom covers for these movies?
Thanks, jakegraham
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Old 05-13-2013, 06:23 PM   #13238
gregmasciola gregmasciola is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bludism View Post
Hey guys! I purchased pirates of the Caribbean the curse of the black pearl Blu-ray combo-pack, but receive the dvd Blu-ray pack. I have tried to find a Blu-ray cover, but can’t find a scan of the combo-pack one. Does anyone have a scan they could send me? Also are there any custom covers for these movies?
Thanks, jakegraham
I did some a few years ago and posted them all on euphoricfx.org. There are plenty of others on there, too.

[Show spoiler]



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Old 05-13-2013, 08:51 PM   #13239
alphadec alphadec is offline
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I have completed my "battlestar Galactica" custom cover today. I have uploaded it to customaniacs so anyone who likes it go there for download.

Code:
http://www.customaniacs.org/forum/custom-blu-ray-covers/193105-battlestar-galactica.html
BG_preview3D.jpg
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Old 05-13-2013, 09:56 PM   #13240
arielcan arielcan is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nissen View Post
Hi guys.

I was asked by a member how I got the "inked" look to my Reel Heroes covers, so I decided to describe the long, tedious process here. It's been a while since I did a long-winded write-up on one of my covers, so I think you'll forgive one now.

BTW, love how you all "whip up" covers, or "I decided to put one together since I had a lunch break anyway". For me it takes hours upon hours.

So here goes:

Ideally, the drawn effect would be created by manually tracing a photo and hand-colouring everything. This is very time-consuming, and frankly, requires an experienced illustrator's hand to look good. (The actual Reel Heroes covers are done by hand, with varying degrees of success.)

For my series of Avengers Phase One covers I couldn't afford the time to do every panel by hand, so I sought out a filter to do it for me. There are many good commercial filters that give a robust hand-drawn look, but I couldn't find one that matched specifically what I was after. (and some of those filters are plain out of my price-range.)

Bearing in mind that I had to apply the comic-book look to 7 or 8 images for each cover, both the main figure and the background panels, I wanted an automated approach. I first thought I could automate this entire process with a Photoshop Action, but no such luck. Each step in my process needed hand tinkering. I experimented quite a bit, and you can see some progress between my first Iron Man and the last Avengers cover.

In the end the procedure was mainly this:

Step 1: The linework.
(Make a copy of the original image first. You will need an untouched version for later stages.)
First I used the standard Poster Edges filter to do the heavy lifting. The settings all varied from image to image, but generally I went for a strong line. That filter also creates a lot of noise in darker areas, so it will have to be cleaned up by hand. You sometimes get a better result if you "clean up" the image before applying the Poster Edges filter, using the Surface Blur tool at various settings. Experimentation is the key.

I then used the Color Range selection tool (Under "Select") to make a selection of only the black in the image. I copied that selection to a separate layer so I would have an isolated version of the black outlines created by the Poster Edges filter. Then I went in and manually erased (with a layer mask in my case) all the noisy bits. I also cleaned up some of the rougher edges at this point. Here is where a pen tablet comes in handy.

Cleaning up the Poster Edges outlines got me only so far, so I drew additional outlines by hand, usually the mouth, tracing the jawline and creases in clothes and other areas I felt needed some enhancements.

I then used the Stroke function to add a slightly thicker outline to the contours of the figure. This only works if you've isolated the figure on a transparent layer or you can easily select it against a simple background. Otherwise you'll have to draw that outline by hand as well.

That takes care of the linework.

Step 2: The hashes, or crosshatches.
I did two things here. First I made a copy of the black only layer I isolated from the "Poster Edges" process. I then applied a Motion Blur filter to it at about a 30-40 degree angle. I then used the Sharpen or Sharpen More filters repeatedly to make the motion blur look like tiny lines. Then I masked the entire layer and went in with the eraser to bring out these small hatches in shadow areas, creases in the clothes and face, and I also used it to feather the edges of large black areas.

Second, I found an image of speed lines from a Manga tutorial and overlaid that on my image, set it to multiply and again masked off the entire layer. Again I could go in with my eraser and bring out these speedlines where I wanted them. Please note I rotated the speed lines to match the angle of the "Motion Blur Lines" I created in the previous step. You could also angle this layer perpendicular to the other hashes and get a crosshatch effect, or apply this same Speed Line layer twice at different angles.

Step 3: The colours.
Here you go back to the copy of the original image and apply any filters you think will give the painted or drawn look. I used a combination of the Dry Brush filter (good for hair and facial details) and the Cutout filter at different settings. I applied the filters on separate copies of the main image, stacked them on top of each other and used the Opacity slider to find a good combination. Sometimes I just used the Dry Brush filter because the Cutout filter is too recognisable.
Most times the colours benefitted from a strong saturation increase to give them that comic book pop. I applied that as a separate Adjustment Layer so I could control it better.

Step 4. Season to taste.

Note that I don't apply any colour halftone or raster effects which every tutorial out there emphasises so heavily. Comics have been printed with excellent colours for the last fifty years so that dotty look is just a throwback to a slightly insulting stereotype of what the "Comic Book Look" is. Comic art is neither simplistic or coarse any more, so it's time the aesthetic prejudice caught up.

Here is a close-up of the Captain America linework:
[Show spoiler]


Hey Presto!
Wow! I can see how much work it takes to finish a product like 'The Avengers' cover. I really admire your talent to redesign a cover in such a beautiful way that makes the original cover look like a copy of your artwork.
I haven't done any custom cover yet, but I plan to.
Keep up the good work!
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