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Basketweave Texture![]() Click image for larger view |
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| Download a preset. You will need my Impressionist Dabs brush preset, unzip and extract it to your Presets directory. |
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| Start a new image. File ->New. Make the image much larger than you want the finished tile, there will be quite a bit of cropping during the course of creating it. Here, I've started with a 500x500 image. Background color doesn't matter, you'll cover the canvas in the next step. |
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Add some variation to the color. Click on the |
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Make the texture. Adjust ->Blur ->Gaussian Blur. Set the radius to 7. Adjust ->Add/Remove Noise ->Add Noise. Set it to Gaussian, 40% and Monochrome. Adjust ->Blur ->Motion Blur. Set it to 90 degrees and 50%. Run the Motion Blur again with the same settings. Adjust ->Sharpness ->Sharpen More. Run this filter two more times. Click on the |
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Make the weave. Effects ->Texture Effects ->Weave. Set the Gap Size to 10. Set the Width to 23. Set the Opacity to 100. The two color swatches need to be darker versions of your foreground color. Here I've used #501C0E for the Weave Color and #48190E for the Gap Color. Click OK to apply. |
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Correct the vertical strips. You'll notice that when the weave filter applies, it does not account for the direction of the strips in the weave. We'll have to fix this "by hand". Layers ->Duplicate. Image ->Rotate ->Free Rotate. Tick off Right and 90 degrees, All Layers unchecked. Unless your image was perfectly square, you've got "extra" transparent canvas on the top layer. Use the crop tool to crop this off. Lower the Opacity of the top layer to about 50% by dragging the Opacity slider in the layer control palette. Unless you got very lucky, this layer does not "line up" with the bottom layer. Zoom in on the image so that you can see what you're doing. Click on the |
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Preparing the pattern. You'll make the pattern seamless by cropping again. Drag out a crop rectangle. Make the top of the crop sit directly on top of the first full row of horizontal strips. Make the left crop sit directly to the left edge of the first full column of vertical strips. The right crop needs to go on the left edge of a column that matches the left side of the cropped image. The bottom crop needs to go on the top edge of a row that matches the top of the cropped image. This is harder to describe than it is to do. If you find that you can't get it right, make a crop, right click on the top layer in the layer control palette, choose Merge Down then Effects ->Image Effects ->Seamless Tiling. Checkmark the Show Tiling Preview Box. When this comes up checkmark the Show Original box. Do not apply this filter. If your crop is correct just hit cancel. If it's not, hit cancel then Undo the merge and try again. |
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Finish correcting the strips. This part is rather tedious, you will have to remove the incorrect strips (which are now the horizontal strips). Zoom in on the image so that you can see what you're doing. Click on the |
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Make the pattern seamless. Right click on the top layer in the layer control palette and choose Merge Down. Effects ->Image Effects ->Offset. Click the radio buttons for Center and Wrap. Hit OK. Because we made the tile with variations in color for realism, we have a seam in the center of the image both horizontally and vertically. We'll use the |
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