Photography is an art form — and if you’re like me (one who couldn’t paint a closet, let alone a watercolor painting), you can still become that artist using yet another artistic filter: Watercolor. Start out by choosing a colorful photo that you’d like to see as a painting, and then choose FilterOArtisticOWatercolor. Figure 14-16 shows the Watercolor filter with a colorful photo I’ve chosen to convert into a virtual watercolor painting.

Figure 14-16: Getting artsy with the Watercolor filter.
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Part V: The Part of Tens________________________________________________ |
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As with some photos I apply filters to, I normally wouldn’t have used this photo for my portfolio. By applying the Watercolor filter, however, I’ve given the image an entirely new “feeling” and it becomes more interesting. As photographers, we all have some photos that never make it past Bridge to be |
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Processed in Photoshop. We have a tendency to pick the best photographs, and process those — but even the “rejects” have possibilities. Take a look at photos you’ve skipped over in the past, and apply some Photoshop filters to them. I think you’ll be happy with some of the results! |
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Figure 14-17 shows the original photo, and then the watercolor creation I created with it. |
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Figure 14-17: Original photo (inset) and the watercolor version of the same image. |
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Adding Cool Glowing Edges Want to take an already-abstract photo like the one shown in Figure 14-18, and make it even weirder? The Glowing Edges filter can do just that. It automates that old art-class project where you color solid swaths of color onto a small rectangular piece of cardboard (bearing down on the crayons to leave many layers). Color over the whole thing with black, and then use a sharp object to etch |
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Figure 14-18: Original photo. |
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__________________________Chapter 14: Ten Great Photoshop Filters A picture with outlines that expose the solid colors in the layers. I always thought those projects were fun, and they wasted a lot of class time! Well, get ready to take that to the next level. |
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The Glowing Edges filter, shown in Figure 14-19, is accessible by choosing FilterOStylizeOGlowing Edges. When your photo is first displayed, it looks transformed into a very black background with some glowing, colored edges around the subjects of the frame. You can adjust the effects of the glowing edges by adjusting the Edge Width, Edge Brightness, and Smoothness sliders. Figure 14-19 shows the Glowing Edges filter and the image with the filter applied. |
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Figure 14-19: The effects of the Glowing Edges filter. |
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