How to Make Pop Art Images in Photoshop

Weekends are great for learning new photoshop techniques so I thought I’d post another video tutorial today. This one teaches how to convert a regular digital image into a ‘pop art’ image in photoshop.

I hope you enjoy it.

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22 Responses to “How to Make Pop Art Images in Photoshop”

  • Kevin O'Mara Says:

    I don’t wish to make it sound like I don’t appreciate the work that has gone into the tutorial, because I do. I would just like to suggest that in the future you include a still image of ‘before and after’ so that readers know whether or not the video is something in which they will be interested (or whether or not it’s a technique with which they are already familiar).

  • Andrew Ferguson Says:

    Yeah, i agree with Kevin. It’d be really useful to see the effect they’re going for so I know if I should spend the time watching it.

  • mike Says:

    well, you can see the result as a first image, so I dont really understand the above comments.

    Personally, I think that applying a bunch of filters is hardly enough to call smoething pop-art, there has to be some comoposition, some decition has to me made wether you want to contrast certain elements or not, the fact that he just polarized everything leaves a lot os noise and dirt all around… I dont think its a very good tut.

  • Chris Osborne Says:

    I’m guessing that they meant not needing to see any of the tutorial before deciding if it’s worth it. I know it was kind of a pain for me to need to see as much of the thing as I did before knowing how it would turn out.

  • Darren Says:

    Appreciate the comments but this isn’t a video I actually made - it’s one that we have brought to you via youtube. You can follow up with the author via the website luv2help.com

  • Kevin B Says:

    this is cool and all, but if youre serious about this kind of stuff, get adobe illustrator, its a vector art program…
    but thats all tracing and stuff, if you just wanna experiment with new ideas, stick with photoshop

  • Sime Says:

    um… you could see the final product within about 21 seconds of the tut’ starting?.. and the starting image about 3 seconds after that.. So for somebody that doesn’t have illustrator and for someone with a basic understanding or PhotoShop (me) I thouth the tutorial was handy and I will use it, maybe, at some point or another. Thanks…

  • Todd Jordan Says:

    Great tutorial. Very speedy, so I’ll have to rewatch it for sure.

    What I appreciated most is that there were no advanced or tricky techniques used.

    Good share.
    Todd

  • Jim G Says:

    Without patience and tolerance,I would have niether the friends, or the skills that I posess today.Great article!! I am sure that I will have to review it several times in order to extract all the details that you included in such a short piece.THANK YOU,THANK YOU,THANK YOU!!!
    Jim G

  • Ziv Says:

    I think mike is right. you can’t create pop art just by using a bunch of filters and blending all of them. if at least he used masks to make things more reversable if you made a mistake…
    I prefer the andy worholl (hope I wrote it right) method. you select areas that you want to color (say shirt and then hair) create outlines and color it.

  • Mike Panic Says:

    I’m still not a fan of video tutorials, it is extremely hard to pause video, toggle between it and photoshop and back up a step.

  • Becky Says:

    Thanks so much for posting this. I have a new SLR and am new to Photoshop. I found this really interesting. I am really interested in learning Photoshop. I never thought of YouTube as a learning resource.

  • nick Says:

    did it ever occur to those wanting to see how it would turn out to simply slide the slider to the end of the video and look at the final image? This is what I did.

  • Sandy Says:

    I for one, enjoyed the video tutorial. Geesh, if none of you even care for the effect, why even watch? Picky, picky!

  • roger Says:

    It is not how much you know, it is the mumbling that negatively is affecting the teaching.

    Sounds like the guy is dying there.

    For heavens sake. Take some vitamins or something.

  • ryan s Says:

    Like the technique or not, many of us PS beginners just want to dive into the program and learn some of the things we can do. Even if it is basic and not “pop art” and you don’t like the guy explaining it, look at it this way: it is a cool way to make your pictures stand out and it’s something different. Another tool in the box if you feel like changing it up once in while :)

    Some steps would be nice so we can follow at our own pace like Mike Panic mentioned.

    Only thing I don’t like is similar to when people use Photomatrix to call the edits “HDR images.” Sorry, tonal mapping is just that…not HDR. Call it what it is–maybe someone could suggest another name for this method instead of “pop art images”?

    I for one am grateful for this post :D

    -Ryan

  • lola Says:

    If you are new to PS then understand that there are at least ten ways to do the same thing in photoshop. It’s up to you, your skill and what you need, to decide which method is best for you. Remember that Photoshop was developed for you to work smarter, not harder. I’ve taught PS for over 7 years - and continue to find new things to learn with it. Have fun, don’t drive yourself crazy with tutorials that have no meaning for you. I found this particular tutorial rather long but there are some important things to be learned from it, among them, filters.

  • Dmitri Markine Says:

    True, many ways to create same effects. I personally don’t use layers. I know a lot of artists use 50+ layers. If they’ll look at my work-it’s 2-4 layers max. Same result at the end,but different approach.

  • Charlotte Says:

    It’s not telling you that you only need to apply filters to make something pop-art- it’s just a tutorial, you’re not meant to copy it, you can compose it yourself, and hopefully, the compostion would be there in the original photograph. It was alright. I don’t mind that the guy was mumbling. That’s fine. Maybe he doesn’t really notice that, or can’t really help it. It’s not fair to judge the tutorial on that.

  • FARJANA Says:

    HELLO WHERE CAN U GET AN ADOBEPHOTOSHOP FOR FREE FOR KIDS TO PAINT, CREATE PICSTURES, AND THINGS AND MORE?

  • Latoyah Says:

    Sorry, but found this really hard to follow as somethings werent in the same place as in the video. it did look good but i suppose you have to be very familiar with photoshop. also when i was going through, some things didnt actually work! and my layer went blank :(

  • Israeli Art Says:

    Thanks for an illuminating post
    : )

    I use the techniques outlined here to create all my digital pop art prints. My romance with digital art started out as a hobby in 2006 and I have since slowly dedicated myself to it more and more.

    Check out my gallery of digital pop art and browse the giclee prints i now offer for purchase here: http://www.digitalartprintgallery.com

    All comments always welcome
    : )

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