Misty's birthday week continues...today I worked on one of the photos taken on her birthday. Chalkboard art is all the rage right now and it's everywhere! Inspired by various pins on Pinterest, I knew the exact look I wanted, but I did not have a chance to prepare a chalkboard, so I had to
cheat improvise and rely on a bit of Photoshop magic. I am in no way anywhere near being a Photoshop guru, but I can get the job done...most of the time, and if I get stuck, there's usually a ton of resources and tutorials out there to help me out. So, this is kind of what I had in mind, found on Pinterest:
The link to the original source for the photo appears to be broken, so unfortunately I cannot give a proper credit for the picture. Anyways, you see a lot of these similar kids' birthday photos out there, but I can't say I've seen one done with a dog...until now! The photo I chose for this mini project was this one:
All I had to do was isolate out the white background and replace it with a chalkboard texture. I used this
one by Karin Dalziel on Flickr. I won't go into details about how to isolate an object in Photoshop since there are gazillion tutorials out there on the topic already. Generally, it's easier to isolate your subject from a less busy background, like a solid color in my case. This is how my photo looked at this stage:
Now that I have a blank chalkboard canvas, the rest is all about personalization! You'll need a few fonts and dingbats to give it that chalk feel and to embellish your art. I think it looks better when you mix a lot of different fonts and things look a bit more random and messy like a real chalkboard. Go crazy and decorate to your heart's content! These are some of the fonts I used:
It actually took me a while to finish this last part, because I was trying to figure out the layout and the wording on the fly. I think a little planning on paper beforehand would've made things go much quicker...oh well, that's what I get for being lazy! Here's the finished photo:
So, would I recommend this method to people? Hmm....I'm not sure. It's certainly less time consuming and simpler to just use a real chalkboard for your backdrop. It's also much more organic to use real handwriting than computer fonts and also you can decorate it any way you want. However, I think the photoshop-generated chalkboard does allow you the flexibility to edit your writing later if you need to, and not everyone is artistic or has nice enough of handwriting...and I think it looks "realistic" enough. So, I think it really depends on your individual project needs.