This tutorial introduces the simple use of materials to synthesize the peeling old paintings on the wall. The production process is relatively simple: first put all the material pictures into the same file, change the blending mode of the layer, adjust the color, make the photo older, and then delete some pictures with gaps.
Original picture
Material 1
1. Open the background material picture, ctrl+J to copy one layer, then open the character picture, and drag it into the background. As shown below.
2. Double-click the character layer to bring up the layer style dialog box, and set the mixed color band as shown below (hold down the Alt key to pull the triangle blocks separately).
3. The next step is to set the blending mode of layer 2 to "Multiply" (this mode can generally make it easy to combine some good-looking pictures) as shown below:
4. Click on the eye in front of layer 2 so that it is not displayed, as shown below:
5. Enter the channel panel and make a copy of the channel, as shown below:
6. Use the Magnetic Lasso Tool to make a selection as shown below (note that you must hold down shift when selecting discontinuous areas with the Magnetic Lasso Tool, otherwise the previous selection will disappear), and fill the selection with black, as shown below:
7. Load the selection of the red copy channel, as shown below (click the icon indicated by the red circle below), hold down Ctrl and click on the channel.
8. Go to the layer panel and add a mask to layer 2 (press the icon pointed by the red circle). Let’s talk nonsense. The use of the mask here is the same as adding the mask directly and painting it with a black pen in the third step. It makes sense, but this uses a channel to create a selection to make the area we want to paint clearer, and we can get the following effect:
9. Duplicate layer 2, set the blending mode of the copy of layer 2 to color, and adjust the opacity of the layer to about "36%", as shown below: