Photoshop best brush for dispersio7/26/2023 The only difference is that my subject became all streaky when I liquified her and I didn’t like how this made the bats looked so I used a black solid colour layer instead. I replaced the sky and composited in a moon from photos I’d shot separately and added the bats using the method above. I photographed myself in costume in my garage and Frankenstein-ed different body parts, hair, dress and cape flicks to make the final girl. With a bat theme in mind I set out to photograph a cave, settling on Kweebani Cave at Binna Burra National Park (which turned out to be more of a rock formation than a cave). I’ve seen a few people use the dispersion technique with bird brushes and I always look at their photos and think ‘that would’ve been better with bats’. This technique is not as easy to control but it’s handy if you only want your subject to scatter a little. Alt click to sample your background and paint over your subject. Alt click to sample inside your subject and then paint the scatter around them. Press s to select the clone stamp tool, choose your brush and go to Window>Brush to change its size and scatter amount. There is ANOTHER way to achieve this effect by using the clone stamp tool and it can be done on one layer. I added the first texture I found (which happened to be a Christmas bow) and set the blending mode to Divide. (If your background is already separate place it below the subject layer and duplicate the subject once). Make an optional fourth copy if you want to change the background.
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