Author | Thread |
|
09/08/2004 10:48:29 AM · #1 |
anyone know any PS filters or plgins that will make a pic look more like a drawing or cartoon? thanks! |
|
|
09/08/2004 10:52:43 AM · #2 |
Originally posted by jjbates4: anyone know any PS filters or plgins that will make a pic look more like a drawing or cartoon? thanks! |
in elements go to 'filter'
then 'stylize'
then 'find edges'
then if you want go to enhance and remove color.
this only works on some photos, others don't look right.
|
|
|
10/06/2004 01:04:39 AM · #3 |
Filters--Artistic--Cutout might help as well. (Haven't used PS in a while; moved to The Gimp. I wish The Gimp had Cutout---it makes for some really striking images.) It works sort of like Posterize, but without the ugly grainy edges---it makes clear-edged shapes. Try it out; monkey with the settings. |
|
|
10/06/2004 01:15:58 AM · #4 |
I did this with a "morphed painting" filter. You can get this as part of the shareware version of Thumbsplus (www.cerious.com).
I did this several years ago but uploaded it for this thread. So as long as it's up, let me say, I'd love to hear what people think about it. |
|
|
10/06/2004 01:19:27 AM · #5 |
Originally posted by grendelkhan: Filters--Artistic--Cutout might help as well. (Haven't used PS in a while; moved to The Gimp. I wish The Gimp had Cutout---it makes for some really striking images.) ... |
Yup, I use Cutout in Digital Image Pro 10. Works quite well, drop the number of levels until you achieve the cartoony look that you want. |
|
|
10/06/2004 02:14:14 AM · #6 |
After using Find Edges, a couple of quick ways to reduce the number of colors:
Image > Adjust > Posterize
set to a low number of shades; will work with color or grayscale
Image > Mode > Indexed Color
set to a low number of colors; more likely to produce dithering than Posterize; change back to RGB mode before saving final version. |
|
|
10/06/2004 08:55:13 AM · #7 |
There are two photoshop actions you can download on this page:
//www.atncentral.com/download.htm
Cartoon Action and Comix Actions
Louise
|
|
|
10/06/2004 11:01:48 AM · #8 |
If you have Flash, you can vectorize a jpg or gif. |
|
Home -
Challenges -
Community -
League -
Photos -
Cameras -
Lenses -
Learn -
Help -
Terms of Use -
Privacy -
Top ^
DPChallenge, and website content and design, Copyright © 2001-2025 Challenging Technologies, LLC.
All digital photo copyrights belong to the photographers and may not be used without permission.
Current Server Time: 04/02/2025 11:38:30 AM EDT.