Click here to see final image. Take a look how to achieve the same effect in Photoshop. | ||||
We will cheat a little bit in this tutorial: we will use Photoshop to pixelate image. See the footnote below the tutorial explaining why. Go to Filter > Pixelate > Mosaic... In filter dialog box choose cell size big enough to produce a grid of approximately 20-30 squares in a row. My image is 460 px by 320 px and I chose cell size of 20 px for it. You can figure out the optimal cell size for your image by dividing width of your image in pixels by any number between 20 and 30 (this is the number of cells in a row), depending on how detailed your image is and on the density of dots you’d like. Try to get number without fractions. You might want to adjust your image size before pixelating it. In my example, width of 460 px divided by 23 cells in a row gives me 20 px cell size. And it also gives me 16 whole cells in a column (320 px height / 20 px cell size = 16 cells). We don’t want any incomplete cells here. Write down your cell size, we will need it later. Click OK. | ||||
The part in Photoshop is over. Now we are going to finish our mosaic in Illustrator. | ||||
You might want to ask me: Why did we have to pixelate image in Photoshop if Illustrator has the same feature? Good question. See the footnote at the bottom of this page for an explanation. You should end up with the same looking pixelated image you started with, but now it’s vector. Try clicking on image cells; you’ll see that now each cell is a separate vector object. | ||||
Now select the whole row and open Move dialog box again. This time type in 0 in Horizontal and negative cell height in Vertical field (-20 px in my example). Click Copy. Ctrl+D until you got whole image covered with dots. | ||||
Here we go! We are basically finished. If you want to make more detailed image read on. | ||||
You can add 2 more layers like that. At the end make visible all layers and enjoy the work you’ve done. Here are the color adjustments for each layer in my example: Dots 1 – original colors, circle size is 18 px; Dots 2 – duplicate Dots 1; Filter > Colors > Adjust colors (R:G:B 10%:10%:10%); circle size 80% of original; Dots 3 – duplicate Dots 1; no color adjustments; circle size 60% of original; Dots 4 – duplicate Dots 1; Filter > Colors > Saturate (50%); circle size 30% of original; | ||||
Tip: When making color adjustments turn off the selection edges (View > Hide Edges, Ctrl+H) and check Preview box to clearly see the changes. Try different settings to get other results. | ||||
Note: Why did we have to pixelate image in Photoshop if Illustrator has the same feature? Though Illustrator has the same feature (Filter > Create > Object Mosaic) it produces vector mosaic with much worse quality. See mosaic image on the left that was created in Illustrator. Fonte |
quarta-feira, 1 de fevereiro de 2012
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