Creating a speeding bullet
- In a new Photoshop file, make the background black by pressing
Command and the letter I (Control + I in Windows).
- In a layer on the left, make a thin rectangular selection and
fill it with a gray gradient to serve as the gun barrel. It should
bleed off the page on the left and extend slightly into the picture.
- In another layer make a shape filled with a gray gradient to
serve as the bullet. If you don't already know, do a little research
to determine what a bullet projectile looks like.
- Duplicate the layer with the bullet and apply the Motion Blur
filter (Filter > Blur > Motion Blur) at a high amount.
- Move the blurred layer to the left so the resulting streak starts
at the back of the bullet and runs toward the end of the gun barrel.
- Choose the Pen Tool.
- Place the cursor just about at the middle of the bullet, centered
vertically with the bullet.
- Click and drag a point toward the gun barrel so that you get
a handle about an inch long behind the point where you clicked.
Hold down the Shift key to constrain the handle to a perfectly
horizontal position.
- Place the cursor just at the edge of the gun barrel and centered
vertically with the barrel.
- Click and drag, but this time drag the handle down, creating
a curved line that should be curved enough to form the top part
of the gun flash (about a 2-inch handle).
- Place the cursor over the first point you created. The cursor
should get a small zero that signifies that you're about to close
a path.
- Hold down the Option key (or Alt key) and click the point.
- Drag the handle until it matches the original handle you got
when you started the path. The result should be a sideways teardrop
shape.
- Choose "Make Selection" from the pull-down menu of the Path's
palette. Give the selection a large Feather of about 50.
- In a new layer, fill the selection with a bright red color.
- Deselect.
- Select the path in the Path's palette.
- Choose the Pen Tool in the Tool's palette. You'll notice that
the Transform controls under Edit convert to say Transform Path.
- Select Edit > Transform Path > Scale Path.
- Shrink the path so that it's smaller than the original.
- Make it a selection, as before, but with a lower Feather of
about 35.
- In a new layer, fill the selection with a bright yellow.
- Follow the last few steps but make the Feather lower and use
White for the fill.
- Revert the Foreground and Background colors to black and white.
- In a new layer, choose Filter > Render > Clouds.
- Set the cloudy layer to Screen Mode.
- With a large-size eraser, erase the edges of the clouds to from
a cone shape emanating from the gun barrel.
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