jeudi 31 juillet 2014

Editorial illustrations pop from the printed page

MODUS magazine illustrations Simple shapes are a staple of Oranges' work

This gorgeous artwork by Ray Oranges for Modus, the magazine of the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors, is a great example of how to illustrate a magazine article.

Oranges has been commissioned some of the world's top magazines, and for good reason. Combining colour and simple shapes, his creations truly pop from the page.

These particular illustrations accompany an article about the changing status quo in property, construction and UK politics. Their abstract nature mean they successfully evoke the subject while allowing the reader's attention to focus on the words themselves.

MODUS magazine illustrationsMODUS magazine illustrationsMODUS magazine illustrationsMODUS magazine illustrationsMODUS magazine illustrationsMODUS magazine illustrations

What do you make of these illustrations? Let us know in the comments box below!

Words: Sammy Maine

Sammy Maine is a reporter at Creative Bloq.

Font of the day: Adonide

Font of the day: Adonide | Typography | Creative Bloq

TypographyShowcase

Adonide font

Here at Creative Bloq, we're big fans of typography and we're constantly on the hunt for new and exciting typefaces – especially free fonts. So, if you're in need of a font for your latest design or just like to keep a collection so you're prepared, we may be able to help out.

Every day, we're running 'Font of the day', where we'll be posting the best best free and paid-for fonts the web has to offer.

Adonide by Ewen Prigent

Today's font of choice, Adonide, was created by type designer Ewen Prigent of La Boite Graphique. Available from YouWorkForThem, it is described as being "an elegant design, featuring both geometric and grotesque sensibilities. The design is imbued with personality through quirky curves and letterforms that are broad and readable."

Adonide is available to purchase from YouWorkForThem.

Adonide fontAdonide fontAdonide font

Have you created any cool fonts recently? Send them to: kerrie.hughes@futurenet.com

Words: Kerrie Hughes

Kerrie Hughes is channel editor at Creative Bloq.

site stat collection

How to master hair and fur in Maya

Fur and Hair are always tricky areas to attempt in 3D. They often involve complicated systems with a mind boggling amount of attributes to adjust and configure, and this is even before you consider styling and rendering.

In this workshop I want to illustrate my approach to adding hair and fur to a startled Easter bunny, and to do this I will be using xGen. xGen is Autodesk's new suite of tools introduced in the Extension release of Maya 2014.

Originally developed by Disney Animation Studios for films like Tangled and Toy Story, xGen takes the user specified geometry, repeats it in the form of instances and applies it to the surface of a model. These new instances can then be directly controlled through guides, expressions and brushes.

There are many areas of xGen to explore, and its use isn't restricted to just fluffy characters. Its instancing tools are also perfectly adapted to add foliage to an environment or even feathers to a bird. Basically anything which can be repeated over the surface of a model can be used, and with its intuitive controls you can add more variety to each instance by adjusting the size, colour and a wide variety of other attributes.

01. Building the bunny

Begin the construction of the bunny with a handful of cylinders and spheres

When I begin any project I asses what I can reuse and what needs to be built completely. Using a good base model can be essential to kick-start any project and can save lots of time.

This time I chose to start from scratch, and began the construction of the bunny with a handful of cylinders and spheres. These were then combined and adjusted to form the base for her torso.

02. Working in details

Once you have the torso, start to form the rest of the body

Once I had the torso I then began to form the rest of the body. After blocking in her limbs and head I then gradually added more and more detail until I achieved the final result.

It was important for me not to rush ahead, but work on her as a whole, with each detail pass slowly working on smaller and smaller details. This was so I didn't lose sight of the proportions, and overall topology.

03. Posing the bunny

To have more variety, pose the bunny prior to adding the fur

I knew the bunny needed to be posed for this illustration, and as she was symmetrical I could have chosen to leave her in the initial Michael Angelo T-Pose and then rig her for animation. This approach could mean less work later as I could focus my attention on the fur covering one side of the model and then use the mirror tools to copy the information to the opposite side.

This time I wanted the fur to have more variety, so chose to pose the bunny prior to adding the fur. This also had the added bonus of allowing me to adjust the mesh further to fix any areas of bad deformation.

04. Selecting the geometry

xGen works directly onto the surface of the model, and unlike other methods for creating hair or fur doesn't rely on the UV layout, or a complete base model to work. Instead a patch and Ptex system is incorporated here, with each attributes values being exported as a Ptex map.

With this in mind I could focus on selecting the actual polygons I wanted the fur to be applied to, so it was important that I didn't select areas which wouldn't be seen. These included the geometry beneath her dress and also areas which aren't normally hairy like her lips.

05. Defining the xGen Fur Description

Click image to enlarge

xGen allows you to create five main Descriptions, and these can sit inside their own Collections to keep things grouped and tidy. For the fur the best and most obvious choice for the bunny were the Groomable Splines.

Once applied to the selected geometry, these splines then become easily editable, posed and groomed, making it a much quicker and user friendly option for this model.

06. Setting up the description

Click image to enlarge

Before I started grooming the fur I needed to make a few adjustments to the default settings. The length of the fur was doubled and I also increased the density to cover more of the skin, and give me a better preview of how the fur would look when rendered.

07. Update your preview

Click image to enlarge

The yellow guides on the model gave me a great idea of how the fur will flow over the surface of the model, but they only actually influence the fur itself, and I couldn't currently visualise how that will look.

To see the geometry which will be eventually rendered I needed to make sure I kept updating the Preview. This tells Maya to update the geometry to match the guides, and also produces the black lines, which are the actual strands of fur.

08. Grooming the fur

Next it was time to go in and begin to style the fur. First I worked my way around the model using the Pose brush to almost flatten each strand so it followed the surface of the model, rather than stood perpendicular to it.

I also began to adjust the Taper attributes too to vary the width of each blade of fur, making them thinner the further away they were from the skin.

09. Adding length and variety

With the splines posed you can then focus on other areas, like length.

Once happy with the overall flow of the fur it was time to use some of the other tools to vary the look and style. I used the Length brush to vary the length in key areas like her knees, chest, shoulders and around her face.

The Elevate brush was very helpful in pulling any fur which was too flat, away from the surface again, something that can easily happen when using the Pose brush. The Noise brush then worked through the areas of fur which were too linear and tidy, varying the length, orientation and clumping.

10. Adding the Hair Description

Click image to enlarge

Next it was time to shift my focus to her hair. This time I selected just the geometry on her scalp and then created a new Splines based Description.

I chose this as it would allow me to easily generate longer flowing hair which I could again control with Guides rather than attributes or expressions.

11. Adding Guides

Click image to enlarge

Unlike with the Groomable Splines, the Splines based Description doesn't give you any guides to begin with, instead it allows you to place only the guides you need rather than covering the entire area for you.

Initially I created three guides, one at either side of the forehead and a third a little further back, but this time in the centre of her head.

12. Styling the Guides

The initial guides were far too small so I used the Set Length option to quickly increase their size to around 0.25. Once the hair was previewed I could then see it was much longer, plus increasing the guide’s size meant they would be easier to manipulate. I could then simply select and move each guides CVs to begin posing the hair.

13. Using Utilities 

Click image to enlarge

As well as using the guides to shape the hair I also enlisted the help of a few Utilities. Occasionally the CVs would be stubborn and wouldn't move, or I would need a bit more control, so the Reshape Guide tool helped here.

For a larger influence I also used the Lattice tool, which applied a lattice deformer to the selected guides so I could deform, and shape them all at the same time.

14. Adding Clumps

Once I had worked on the shape of the hair, and also added a few more guides to help style the back of her head, I could then focus more on the actual strands of hair. To help me here I used Modifiers, and one in particular was Clumping.

Rather than the hair being a uniform shape once it left the scalp, Clumping allowed me to form specified clumps which I could then control. This gave the hair more variety, and also the nice tapered look towards each clumps tip.

15. Rendering

I was approaching the point now where I needed to see how the fur and hair was looking. The default shaders were set to colour the hair white, which wasn`t what I wanted, so I changed that to brown to match the underlying texture.

I then needed to adjust the specularity as well as some of the other attributes, as well as go back and adjust the hair and furs density to get the correct look. 

16. Back Lighting

Finally, a little back light was added to enhance the details

Although the fur was looking better it was still a little flat. What I like about hair and fur is the way the light behind always passes through the outer strands. I wanted to mimic this with the bunny’s fur and luckily there was a quick way to do this without complicated light rigs.

In the shader node there is a simple Back Gamma attribute, and also a Back Color. Setting the Back Gamma to 5, and the Back Color to white produced a nice effect which also helped to pick out some of the previously hidden details.

Words: Antony Ward

For over two decades Antony Ward, the director at antCGi has been provoking pixels and in that time he has worked for many top studios and written three technical manuals.

Isometric illustrations pop from the printed page

MODUS magazine illustrations Isometric illustration is a staple of Oranges' work

Isometric animations and isometric vector art are becoming more and more popular, especially within the pages of magazines. And this gorgeous artwork by Ray Oranges for Modus, the magazine of the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors, harnesses the trend masterfully.

Oranges has been commissioned some of the world's top magazines, and for good reason. Combining colour and simple shapes, his creations truly pop from the page.

These particular illustrations accompany an article about the changing status quo in property, construction and UK politics. Their abstract nature mean they successfully evoke the subject while allowing the reader's attention to focus on the words themselves.

MODUS magazine illustrationsMODUS magazine illustrationsMODUS magazine illustrationsMODUS magazine illustrationsMODUS magazine illustrationsMODUS magazine illustrations

What do you make of these illustrations? Let us know in the comments box below!

Words: Sammy Maine

Sammy Maine is a reporter at Creative Bloq.

A new way to enjoy classic children's stories

A new way to enjoy classic children's stories | Inspiration | Creative Bloq

InspirationShowcase

Some think that classic children's tales are timeless and should never be changed. But forward-thinking recent graduate Annabelle Murguet has no truck with that kind of attitude.

Inspired by the way Milan-based duo Francesco Rubi and Silvia Quintanilla, aka Carnovsky, use colours to hide and reveal certain parts of their work, Murguet decided to take the same principle and apply it to storytelling.

Her design project envisions an app featuring three different versions of Little Red Riding Hood, Three Little Pigs and other well-known stories in cyan, magenta and yellow. Each is revealed in turn by the use of coloured filters. For example, in one version, Little Red Riding Hood is portrayed as a spoiled girl; in another the story is set in a futuristic world.

Murguet also suggests this concept could be used for educational purposes, such as telling the history of Christopher Columbus discovering America from the perspectives of both the Europeans and Native Americans.

Words: Christian Harries

Christian Harries is a freelance product designer and recent graduate from Ravensbourne. His portfolio can be seen here.

site stat collection

Flash sale: save 50% on your ticket to Generate London today

Flash sale: save 50% on your ticket to Generate London today | Web design | Creative Bloq

Web designOffer

Today only we're releasing a limited number of Generate London sale tickets starting at a massive 50 per cent off. The sooner you click, the more you save, so you could get a ticket for as little as £137.50 if you’re one of the first to buy.

We've arranged an outstanding bunch of speakers for this event. There are keynotes from Jeremy Keith and Dan Cederholm, as well as an all-star line-up including Jake Archibald, Meagan Fisher, Chris Murphy, Denise Jacobs and Elliot Jay Stocks.

The packed schedule will run over two tracks and culminates with the Standardistas' Open Book Exam, which is a pub quiz with a difference. If you want to take part, go here to sign up your team once you've bought your conference ticket. And if you need to present a business case to your boss, download our handy guide to everything that’s great and essential about Generate.

How to get the discount

To be in with a chance of snapping up one of these special price tickets, you'll need to head over to the Generate London site right now. We don't know how quickly the tickets will sell so hurry!

Generate will take place on 26 September 2014 at the Grand Connaught Rooms in London's Covent Garden.

site stat collection

Font of the day: Nauman

Font of the day: Nauman | Typography | Creative Bloq

TypographyFreebie

 Nauman

Here at Creative Bloq, we're big fans of typography and we're constantly on the hunt for new and exciting typefaces – especially free fonts. So, if you're in need of a font for your latest design or just like to keep a collection so you're prepared, we may be able to help out.

Every day, we're running 'Font of the day', where we'll be posting the best best free and paid-for fonts the web has to offer.

Nauman from The Northern Block

Available from type foundry The Northern Block, Nauman is described as "a modern humanist sans serif made for the screen. Broad open letter forms are combined with precise geometry to create a functional and legible font that's ideally suited to the web and on-screen applications."

You can download Nauman Regular for free over on The Northern Block.

 Nauman Nauman

Have you created any cool fonts recently? Send them to: kerrie.hughes@futurenet.com

Words: Kerrie Hughes

Kerrie Hughes is channel editor at Creative Bloq.

site stat collection

mercredi 30 juillet 2014

50 free Photoshop actions

We've rounded up some of the best Photoshop actions that are free to download and create stunning effects. Adobe's flagship image-editing software Photoshop has a powerful programming language built-in that allows you to record tasks as an 'action' and replay the steps to complete the task automatically. Not only can you record your own, but you can also import actions, opening up a whole range of effects and time-saving options.

So to add to our collections of Photoshop plugins and Photoshop resources, here are some great Photoshop actions that are free to download and install, for photographers, graphic designers, game artists and more. Enjoy!

01. Night to Twilight

Free Photoshop actions Night to Twilight

This set of 11 actions convert your night-time images into twilight photos by introducing a colour cast and lightening the sky. The effect is rendered using layers, so you can adjust the degree of twilight by reducing the layer’s opacity, making it nice and flexible.

02. Vintage Light Leaks

Free Photoshop actions Vintage Light Leaks

This handy selection of light leaks has been created using gradients, making it very flexible for adding non-destructive vintage effects to your images. The free version includes five high-quality leaks, all featuring support for 16-bit colour so you can achieve brighter-than-white highlights, and they also work with video!

03. 3D Map

Free Photoshop actions 3D Map

A brilliant action that converts a flat vector map into an isometric 3D map mockup. There are three different styles of map available: sand, ice and grass, and the action also allows you to drop in your choice of buildings, trees, landscape elements and signs.

04. Hard Lomo Action

Free Photoshop actions Hard Lomo Action

Deviant Art is a great place to find Photoshop actions, as this example from BlackLaceStock demonstrates. Included here is a set of actions that add a classic lomo-look to your images, akin to running an instagram effect.

05. RetroFilters

Free Photoshop actions RetroFilters

Chris Spooner is well known for his excellent Photoshop tutorials and giveaways, and he doesn’t disappoint with this new selection of 10 free retro-style Photoshop actions. Each of the effects is inspired by 35mm film and processing techniques, and includes some lovely gritty options as well as colour treatments.

06. Cross-processing ATN

 Cross-processing ATN

Cross-processing is a traditional photographic technique involving deliberate processing of one type of film in a chemical solution intended for another, resulting in oddly skewed colours and increased contrast and saturation. This free Photoshop action gives you a way to recreate the effect digitally, and is available free for personal use.

07. Purple contrast

 Purple contrast

This free Photoshop action washes out some of the colour from an image and gives it a purpley hue. A good way to give your photographs a dramatically downbeat look.

08. Sunlight actions

 Sunlight

This set of five free Photoshop actions is designed to enhance and beautify your sunlit photos.

09. Bright eyes

 Bright eyes

This free Photoshop action gives an intense look to blue eyes, as shown above. A great effect for those extreme closeups.

10. High Key

 High key

This action requires a credit if you use it, but offers a very simple way to convert a regular photograph into a stunning high-key portrait with clean lines and an almost dreamy finish, without compromising essential areas of contrast.

11. Sun Kissed

Light up any image with this comprehensive collection of sunlight effects that'll brighten and tone even the drabbest landscape. Simply add a bit of a warm toned, or go the whole hog and throw in a setting sun complete with a lens flare effect; it's all there.

12. High Definition Sharpening

 High definition sharpening

The final stage of image preparation should be to sharpen your images according to the final delivery method - you sharpen differently for print or screen. This free action from MCP Actions offers a simple one-click solution to sharpening, with the ability to control the degree of sharpening that’s been applied after the fact by adjusting the opacity and masking of layers.

13. Bella Action

 Bella action

This action adds a beautiful warmth to your photographs, bringing out rich tones in hair and skin, and softening colours with a pink cast that creates a romantic, nostalgic feel.

14. Vintage Neon

This simple filter give your photos a tinted, washed-out look with an extra neon touch that'll turn lowlights into colourful highlights.

15. Magic 3D

 Magic 3D

Want to go 3D with Photoshop actions? Create sophisticated pseudo-3D extrusions from text, shapes or layers with gloss and highlights using this great tool.

16. Polanoid Generator 3

 Polanoid Generator 3

Turn any image into a Polaroid instantly with one of 10 different effects. Includes colour treatments and shadows automatically, and it's one of those Photoshop actions you'll use again and again.

17. Soften Skin Effect

 soften skin effect

Used in combination with an existing selection or mask, this smooths skin while retaining textures and colouring saving clean-up time.

18. The Mini Collection

Featuring some impressive retro Photoshop actions, plus a kit of light leaks and some vintage Photoshop brushes, the Mini Collection from FilterGrade is a free taster of its larger FilterGrade Bundle.

19. Lithprint

 Lithprint

Create a lithograph-style image from your raw photos. This works best on larger images that have already been given a medium-contrast treatment.

20. Wedding Enhancers Kit

 wedding enhancers kit

Photoshop actions are extremely useful for wedding photographers, dealing with a huge number of shots. Here you get a set of eleven actions that automatically create common portrait effects, especially around the theme of wedding photography. Includes skin smoothing and soft filter effects as well as b/w conversion.

21. Pencil Draw

 pencil draw

This action uses contrast to find the edges in your image and automatically render a pencil sketch effect. Start from a full-colour image with no need to convert to black and white first.

22. HDR Action

 HDR action

Remove the lack of contrast that comes with HDR photography with this set of four actions; HDR fix light, normal, heavy, and clicker.

23. Old Photo Action

 old photo action

Want to make your images look like they've through a time warp? Then get experimenting with this old photo action, which adds colour and contrast.

24. Portrait Action

 portrait action

Desaturate the colour in your photography with this portrait action, which creates a gorgeous vintage effect. 

25. Split Toning Action

 split toning action

The area between greyscale and colour is split toning and adding this slight change to your photos can have a dramatic effect. You can also create retro and abstract images with this technique.

26. Amatorka Action 2

 Amatorka action 2

Create an instant action-movie-style colour treatment with a blue-green cast, rich saturation and increased contrast.

27. Photoshop Color Actions 2

 Phjotoshop colour actions 2

A nice range of colour treatments including rich grainy black and white, bleach bypass, and some heavy casting effects. Great for experimentation.

28. STICKERS n TAPE

 stickers n tape

Create round stickers with a curl in the corner, or polaroid-style images with clear sticky tape holding it in place. Site requires free registration to download action.

29. 1930s Glitter Text

 1930s glitter text

Automatically convert your text into a snazzy 1930s-style retro treatment with shiny sequins and a nice 3D effect. It’s also easy to adjust after running the action as all the layers are retained.

30. Gum Bichromate Print

 gum bichromatic print

Emulate 19th Century gum bichromate prints with this straightforward action that produces beautiful textured effects.

31. Vintage Collection

If you're after a vintage effect for your photography but you're not entirely sure what, nab this collection from DeviantArt user Yeonseb. It contains 14 assorted vintage actions, so you're bound to find somethng to your liking.

32. Stamp Generator

 stamp generator

Turn an image into a stamp automatically using an included Photoshop brush to define how the frill will sit along the edge of the final artwork.

33. Denim & Leather

 denim and leather

Automatically generates a blue denim texture, 'sews' on a leather patch and embosses your own artwork onto the leather. Nice, simple and effective output that could be adapted for a variety of purposes.

34. Modelize

 modelize

Automatically make any portrait look like you’ve used a model with this action. A series of effects are built up to produce a soft-glow effect around your portrait for a magazine cover-image result.

35. Remove White Background

 remove white background

Automatically remove white backgrounds with this suite of three actions that allow for different automated processes to strip out the background of your isolated images.

36. Spotlight

Make the focal point of an image really stand out with this action from Christopher Fowler, which will train a virtual spotlight on your picture.

37. Paper Fold

 paper fold

Automatically render your artwork onto a trifold paper design in pseudo-3D, complete with shadows and shading on the image. Ideal for rendering paper designs ahead of presenting them on-screen to clients.

38. Long Shadow

free photoshop actions

This free Photoshop action allows you to create a long shadow from your text content and leave it as it is, as you can set the Opacity manually as per the desire.

39. Triptych Generator

free photoshop actions

Generate standard 3x triptych panels for print, with a 3D effect visual triptych generator also available. Print sizes include 1000x600mm, 1300x800, 1600x1000 with 50mm depth @ 288dpi.

40. Art of Decay

 Art of Decay

This excellent free action creates a simple heavily-aged photo effect.

41. Black and White

 Black and White

This action adds a punchy high-contrast black & white effect to your photographs. It produces a nice grittiness with heavy grain and over-saturated blacks. Great for creating a stylized image.

42. Page Curl

 Page Curl

This simple action is based on a tutorial on how to create a convincing page curl effect in Photoshop, but with the action there’s no need to take all the suggested steps - simple click and run for a handy time-saving effect ideal for web designers.

43. Dramatic Sepia

 Dramatic Sepia

This superb action offers a slightly more refined version of the standard sepia effect by adding a contrast curve to age the final result so that it feels like a faded photograph. Dramatic Sepia offers a great way to communicate a sense of age.

44. Thinking of You

 Thinking of you

This is another stylized photographic treatment that adds a filmic, green-cast and heavily saturated shadows effect. The end result feels both blockbuster-movie-like, and very fashion orientated.

45. Unspoken

 Unspoken

This simple action creates a beautiful blockbuster-film look, heightening details in your photographs and increasing contrast, while introducing a blue/green tint.

46. Action 3D

 Action 3D

This quirky action from JonasFan93 creates a pseudo 3D anaglyphic image by separating out colour channels within your image and offsetting them. This freebie offers a number of different styles that are more suitable for use in printed brochures and website design where you’re aiming for a stylized effect.

47. Black and White Action

 Black & White action

This action creates a lovely black and white effect with a rich vignette and nice silver/sepia tint to the final treatment.

48. Holgarizer

 Holgarizer

If you’re after a toy-camera-style effect, this action produces just that. Nice and simple to use, but very effective and convincing results (similar to Instagram images) including over-saturated colours, bleeding and heavy vignettes.

49. HipstaRev - Pack 1

 HipstaRev pack 1

This set of actions creates hipstamatic-style images inside Photoshop. The download includes three actions, each of which creates a recognisable treatment including borders and noise.

50. Outer Space

 outer space

Create an outer space background automatically complete with space dust and nebulous gases. Randomly colours the scene to produce a different effect every time.

Words: Sam Hampton-Smith

This is an updated and expanded version of an article that previously appeared on Creative Bloq.