
As a comfortable user of Photoshop you know about the advantage having your own set of backgrounds, patterns, brushes or you name it. Here is a little guide that shows you how to create your own "asphalt" ready for you to be used as background or pattern in your next illustration. Read more>> As a comfortable user of Photoshop, you know about the advantage of having your own set of backgrounds, patterns, brushes or you name it. Here is a little guide that shows you how to create your own "asphalt" ready for you to be used as background or pattern in your next illustration.
Create a new Photoshop document (1200 x 700, 72dpi). CTRL-J to duplicate the background layer.
Make sure your foreground and background colors are black and white (hit D to switch the current colors to black and white). Choose FILTER > Render > Clouds. Name the layer Clouds.

Then choose SELECT > Color Range with the FUZZINESS on 23 and click on a lighter area of the Clouds layer to create a selection (click OK). Then hit CTRL-J to move the selection on a new layer. You can name the new layer "White spots".

Still on the White spots layer, choose FILTER >Texture > Craquelure (Spacing: 15, Depth: 4, Brightness: 1).

Go to the Clouds layer to make it active. Choose on FILTER > Artistic > Rough Pastels (Stroke length: 1, Stroke Detail: 16, Texture Type: Canvas, Scaling: 75, Relief: 30, Light Direction: Bottom, leave Invert unchecked).

Press CTRL-J to double the Clouds layer and go to the filter menu again. FILTER > Texture> Craquelure (Spacing: 10, Depth: 5, Brightness: 2).

Change the Blending Mode of the "Clouds copy" layer to "Darker Color".

Go to the White spots layer and change its Blending Mode to Hard Light. Then create an adjustment layer SOLID COLOR (set it on black). Change the Blending Mode of the adjustment layer to Overlay.

This is it. You can play around with the Blending Mode of the White spots layer and with its Opacity to change your effect. The asphalt will appear very realistic when you "lay it on the ground" by placing it in perspective.
Thanks to Peter Einheuser for sharing this article with Dezinerfolio. Source: Ardis Creative
Comments
All about the layers. Nice work!
thanks.great post.
Well...No offense but that has to be one of the worst textures I've seen in a long time, very 90's web background image.
This looks very good and well made.
thanks
thank you very very much
Nice write up.
Best regards.
thanks for sharing great post mate.
regards,
very very good for sharing very thankss
For sharing thank you very much good very beautiful work
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