1. get image the size and format you want it. 2. convert image to grayscale 3. convert image back to rgb 4. create a duplicate layer (i.e. two of the same image on top of eachother. 5. apply the "color halftone" filter to the top layer. You are going to need to play with the settings until you get the points to an appropriate size. I have no clue what any of the settings actually mean so I just try and try again until it looks about right. Don't worry if you cant get it to look clean enough at this step. It will usualy be to pointelated(if that is a word) that gets fixed in the next step. 6. Use the opacity slider for the top layer and decrease the opacity until it looks right. This is largely subjective.
there you go. let me know if any of that doesn't make sense.
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one of these days...
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1. get image the size and format you want it.
2. convert image to grayscale
3. convert image back to rgb
4. create a duplicate layer (i.e. two of the same image on top of eachother.
5. apply the "color halftone" filter to the top layer. You are going to need to play with the settings until you get the points to an appropriate size. I have no clue what any of the settings actually mean so I just try and try again until it looks about right.
Don't worry if you cant get it to look clean enough at this step. It will usualy be to pointelated(if that is a word) that gets fixed in the next step.
6. Use the opacity slider for the top layer and decrease the opacity until it looks right. This is largely subjective.
there you go. let me know if any of that doesn't make sense.
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THAT'S RIGHT! MEXICAN is a language now!
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it all hangs out, and it ain't always pretty.
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