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Gimp tutorials swirl background12/27/2023 ![]() ![]() Same method should work for making certain nebulae, if you are of the spaceborne magic persuasion. If you feel like it, add in some dust and particles for good measure with the same colour and value.Ħ: Duplicate your layer and hide the copy.ħ: Go your "Levels" settings and change the input layers of your base layer to 0, 0.30, 125 (or around there).Ĩ: Make your copied layer visible and set its layer mode to hard light. You should already be seeing a slightly smoky texture by this point.ĥ: Pick a smaller brush and - with a slightly lighter lemon yellow - airbrush some texture, adding edges and peaks. We’ve curated the best of the best tutorials in the following article. Make certain some streams overlap others. In fact, the tutorial scene behind Gimp does not need to hide in any way. If you are using a program with a bristled brush, this may be a better option - by all means, do try it.Ĥ: With the same brush, smudge your swirls in the direction of the "flow". Vary the values.ģ: With a large, soft oil brush, airbrush the shapes of your swirls with lemon yellow, value at around 80 but below 90. Pick either a large acrylic brush or a large oil brush and add some random texture by varying the values.Ģ: Take a large oil brush and spatter on the general shape of your swirls with highly desaturated brown/orange, leaving plenty of blue shining through. This was done in GIMP 2 with only standard brushes, but since the math is similar it should work regardless what program you work with.ġ: Start out with a highly desaturated dark blue background. There are many others, so I am mostly writing this down to remember it myself. ![]() This is a method for making magic swirls I discovered rather by accident. ![]()
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