Preview of Final Results
Tutorial Resources
Step 1
Create a new document in Photoshop. Make it 1920 by 1200 which is a
standard HD Wallpaper size. Now fill the document with black.
Step 2
Now open up your mountain/clouds picture and select the bit of clouds
that you want in your background, or choose another background that
you’d like for your wallpaper.
Step 3
Copy and paste the image you’d like (clouds in this case) into your wallpaper.
Step 4
Go to Image>Adjustments>Exposure and bring down the exposure
and the offset and bump up the gamma a bit. This will creat some
contrast and darken up your image so it’s punchy.
Step 5
In a new layer, use your marque tool and create a rectangle and fill it with white.
Step 6
Duplicate this white rectangle layer many times and start lowering
the opacities at random levels. This will create something like the
image bellow.
Step 7
When you’ve made about 10-20 dupicated layers with random opacities
then go ahead and group them (highlight them all and hit ctrl/cmd + G)
and then dupicate the group a couple of times to save you time. Then
simply spread out the groups of rectangles by clicking and dagging them
so they look randomish. This step is purely to save you time, and you
can skip it if you want the ultimate random look to your wallpaper, but
it will just take you longer.
Step 8
When you’re satisfied with your rectangle shape collage, form one
final group with all your single rectangle group layers. If you’ve
created multiple subgroups, then just group them all so that you can hit
ctrl/cmd + T and rotate them all 45% to one side like so.
Step 9
This design that we’re doing is a “V” shape, so you need to highlight
exactly one half of the wallpaper (to the opposite side you rotated
your rectangle group) and create a mask. This will hide the portion that
you haven’t selected. Then invert the mask by hiting ctrl/cmd + I. You
could also do this step by selecting the side you want to keep and
hitting the mask button for the exact same result.
Step 10
Then you can either move your group around so it looks like half of a
“V” shape, or you can make a diagonal selection and mask out that
region as well so you end up with something like this. You can do this
editing on your mask layer by selecting it. Just remember that whatever
is in white will show up, and whatever is in black will be invisible.
Step 11
Once you’re satisfied with your masking, go ahead and duplicate the
group and flip it by hitting ctrl/cmd + T, then right clicking and
hitting “flip horizontal”. Now you should see something like this.
Step 12
This is a checkpoint. Your layers should look similar to this. Now to
save you space and memory, and make sure your computer doesn’t get
bogged down by the size of the photoshop document you can duplicate this
layer to make a copy, turn off the visibility (in the layers menu… it
looks like an eye… click it!) and then flatten your new copy so it
becomes a flat layer.
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