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Repeat Textural Backgrounds for Pattern Design Swatches in Photoshop

Unlock creativity with Skillshare! Learn acrylic painting, AI writing, graphic design, and photography.

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  • icon37 minutes
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  • iconOnline - Self Paced
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About Repeat Textural Backgrounds for Pattern Design Swatches in Photoshop

Introduction to Producing a Background Texture Tile

Lesson 1 Setting Up and the Offset Filter

Lesson 2 Rubber Stamping to Hide the Joins

Lesson 3 Finessing the Outside Join Lines

Lesson 4 Testing the Pattern with ATD

Lesson 5 Playing in Illustrator

Lesson 6 Half Drop Repeat Tile

What You Will Learn?

  • Hey there! Thanks for your interest in Repeat Textural Backgrounds for Pattern Design Swatches. A seamless pattern is an image that can be placed side-by-side with copies of itself. Ideally, there are no visible seams, so you can repeat this image and create a pattern that can go on infinitely to create unique backgrounds, text effects or brand elements. Often, we need a textured background, or a texture to overlay other objects. Most of the time we need a seamless tile so that it can repeat indefinitely. Tiled textures work well with repeating patterns. With a tiled texture, you can create a small image file, then make it repeat several times across the object. It is not necessarily just for use in pattern design. I personally make use of these in my illustrative work as well..
  • I have geared this class specifically in response to a student who wanted to produce a soft texture behind line art flowers she produced in one of my other classes, Textural Floral Pattern Design with the Photoshop Extension Textile Designer. Please Note: The Adobe Textile Designer Plugin has been de-commisioned by Adobe, so you will be unable to download it for free as earlier stated (by joining the beta program). I am unable to pull this class..
  • Creating a seamless repeating pattern is relatively easy using the methods in this class, Repeat Textural Backgrounds for Pattern Design Swatches. The easiest way to show you the concept is with quick demonstrations, so I have tried to keep all the lessons short and to the point. I am using Photoshop, but the concept is what is important. This works fine in Gimp and other software that has an offset filter and a rubber stamp or cloning tool with the same functionality..
  • It is best to start with an image with a relatively even and continuous tone, but I demonstrate with a watercolour and later with some line art. If your image has an obvious element on one side and is light on the other, it will show and it will be more difficult to work with, but I show you how to make it work. I then demonstrate using that tile in the background of the repeat pattern I made in my class Troubleshooting Adobe Textile Designer Issues..
  • This is a great course for you to take no matter what your purpose for the end pattern swatch you create. Start straight away, so you can be benefitting from your knowledge immediately in your art practice!.
  • Intro: Introduction to Producing a Background Texture Tile.
  • In this video, I will give you a short and sweet overview of what I will be teaching and some of the new skills you will learn..
  • Lesson 1: Template, Clipping Mask & Live Transformation.
  • In this lesson, we will use the offset filter to set up the repeat, then I will show you the initial use of the rubber stamp tool to clone areas. We will use this technique to disguise the distinct join lines we want to eliminate..
  • Lesson 2: Rubber Stamping to Hide the Joins.
  • We will work on trying to hide the seams further. I will discuss with you many of the brush control tips that I know and pitfalls to avoid throughout this lesson, preparing us for the next step..
  •  Lesson 3: Finessing the Outside Joins.
  • In the last lesson, we completed most of the touchups of the joins, avoiding the very edges of the tile. In this lesson, we address those spots directly. We will work with the navigator panel so that you learn how useful it can be in this type of situation. We even set-up the original test swatch!.
  • Lesson 4: Testing the Pattern with Adobe Textile Designer.
  • Testing the pattern with Adobe Textile Designer is the focus of this lesson, after we finalize the swatch with some additional adjustments. We continue to use the rubber stamp tool and play with a test document as we do the final adjustments. Then, we open a finished pattern design from a previous class, and I add the watercolor background we have just created. Please Note: The Adobe Textile Designer Plugin has been de-commisioned by Adobe, so you will be unable to download it for free as earlier stated (by joining the beta program). I am unable to pull this class..
  • Lesson 5: Playing in Illustrator.
  • In this quick lesson, I will show you how to export the Photoshop pattern swatch, take it into Illustrator, prepare it, and then add it to your swatches. I proceed to show you a couple of applications of that swatch..
  • Lesson 6: Half Drop Repeat Tile.
  • To help you sort through the confusion of creating a usable half-drop repeat tile in a grid formation, I demonstrate my solution. I've tried to keep this as short as possible by timelapsing all the Adobe Textile Designer processing..
  • Outro:.
  • This last segment will wrap up all we discussed and give you a starting point and encouragement to start today!.
  • Concepts covered:.
  • Concepts covered include but are not limited to Photoshop pattern repeat tile, repeating pattern in Photoshop, offset filter, rubber stamp clone tool, Illustrator pattern, applying imported swatch to typography, align tools, Adobe Textile Designer, export from Adobe Textile Designer, exporting pattern from Illustrator, half drop repeat export from Adobe Textile Designer.
  • You will get the bonus of….