For this
tutorial, I used the non-commercial font "Corleone" that is, in fact,
the font of the famous (and quite awesome) movie
The Godfather. It can be downloaded on various fonts-websites.
In a new document, on a new layer, add some desired text. I started
with the name of the game I mentioned earlier. As for a background,
you're prefectly free. I chose darkgrey, because that's what overall
style the game was. Just make sure the text is white.
Simply add these layer-styles/blending-options to the text:
And now for the
tricky part. I rewrote this part, because not only is this part very
hard, but also because I failed to describe it detailed enough in my
previous version. Luckily, now I hope I will!
Firstly, you will
need to download the brushes we are going to use. If you have a good
place to find nice blood-brushes, use that source. Or maybe you already
have them? If not, or if you just want some awesome new ones, go to
Angryblue where they got awesome blood-brushes in the downloads-section.
How to install them you might ask? If you're downloaded the file and stumbled across a zipped file containing an
.abr-file,
copy that file to a nice and safe location. Some say you have to copy
it to the photoshop-folder, but you don't have to. If you want, it's
cleaner, but it doesn't make any difference.
Once you go back to Photoshop, go to your
brush-tool and open the
Brush Preset Picker
by clicking on the arrow pointing down in the upper taskbar containing
the type of brush. Then, press the play-looking button in the top right
corner and select the option
Load Brushes and use the
finder to locate your brushes. They will automatically be added to your
list. Then simply select one and choose the desired color. In this case
red.
And unlike a normal brush, just click once to apply this stencil-brush, if you will.
To add the blood, create a new layer above the text-layer and use a
nice red color to add some blood on that layer. Just fill it up and
make sure it looks like a package of blood just got spilled.
Then change the blending-mode to
Multiply
to make sure the blood gets darker and "falls" over the shadows which
will make it look like the blood is actually on the text.
And to miraculously remove all the blood that's not part of the text, press
CTRL+SHIFT+G.
WHat this does, is that it masks the layer selected with the layer
underneath it. Meaning that everything not visible in the layer
underneath, will remain invisible in the layer selected.
To create the
bloody mess underneath the text, simply use one (or a few) of your
blood brushes on a new layer and place that layer behind the text and
the overlayed blood-layer. Remember again to use the same color as
before and also the same blending-mode.
Using
Edit>Transform>Perspective,
transform the blood-layer that way, it will look like it's on the
ground. To do that, you will have to perform 2 simple actions. Once
you've activated the perspective-transformation, drag one of the top
corner anchor-points closer to the center. When they are close enough,
do not press
ENTER yet, but go to
Edit>Transform>Free Transform and drag the upper center anchor-point closer to the center.
That should make the blood-layer look like a "rug" laying underneath the text.
Finish it off with a nice shadow made using a VERY stretched circle on a new layer.
Create a new layer above the blood-carpet and grab the
Circular Marquee-Tool and drag the tool from the left of the text to the right and a little bit down so you will get a very long egg (or pancake).
Fill that selection with black and go to
Filter>Blur>Gaussian Blur and add a nice soft blur of 2-3 pixels. Then lower the opacity and admire your work!
As you've noticed by my
last image, you can go all the way with this by applying this to many
different materials. The beauty of this is that because you're using
the blending-mode Multiply, you're making sure that the blood will
ALWAYS overlay the surface realistic.
Try to experiment with other
materials and not only text but also objects maybe. Or drops like me.
If you got a very original outcome or an even better idea, email me or
post your image in the comments and if it's original or just simply
awesome, I will include it in the tutorial!
Thanks for reading and good luck with practicing!