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Originally Posted by kiska Danny, joking or not? I couldn't tell. I am an Auburn grad. 'War Eagle' is the school 'battle cry'. You needn't search for ANYTHING 'tide-ish'.
I was really surprised to see the photo. Didn't think Auburn was that widely known.
kiska |
I finally got a chance to work on this one (and reply to your question). Although moderately knowledgeable college football-wise when it comes to recognizing rivalries between some well known schools (AU among them), I confess ignorance when it comes to knowing much about the respective school cultures or geographic details. I just liked the pic and recognized the logo on the helmut. I wasn't mocking or trying to stir up anything! I'm more familar with AU because that is the school from which Charles Barkley (of NBA fame) graduated.
Still working on sketch effects...
* Duplicated the background
* Smart Blur / Normal to simplify the image a bit
* Smart Blur / Edge Only, Ctrl + I (to invert the result) to yield major edges
* Diffuse > Anisotropic to soften the edges
* Inserted a new layer below this one and filled it with white to serve as a background
* Back to the sketch layer, added a layer mask and airbrushed black to eliminate background noise and extraeous edges
* Duplicated this layer and Ctrl + I (to invert the duplicate). Then click the eyeball to turn this layer off. We'll use it in a minute.
* Press D to set colors to default values
* Duplicated background, dragged duplicate to top of layer stack and desaturated
* Applied Photoshop's Colored Pencil (6,7,50)
* Layer > Add Layer Mask > Hide all
* Airbrushed with white on the layer mask to start revealing some darker tones
* Again...Duplicated background, dragged duplicate to top of layer stack and desaturated
* Layer > Add Layer Mask > Hide all
* Airbrushed with white on the layer mask to bring back a little detail
* Remember the inverted Anisotropic layer we turned off a few layers back? Time to turn it on again and drag it to the top of the layer stack. Changed the blend mode to Lighten. This will tone down the bold black outlines. Adjust opacity to suit.
* Levels adjustment layer: 70, 1.00, 255 - to boost contrast a bit
* New layer
* Alt + Ctrl + Shift + E: Merge all into the new layer
* Apply Photoshop Crosshatch 7, 1, 1 to soften the edges a bit. Optional: Edit > Fade Crosshatch and experiment with amount and blend modes.
~Danny~