Great tutorial; it's useful especially for axonometric drawings: you can apply these pseudo editing lines for all directions of the axonometric view. 💜
Very clever - I especially liked your use of 'filter - minimum' and later, the vertical and horizontal blur. Great tricks to make an excellent end result! Thanks a lot, MZ!
Thanks for the tutorials and the written online steps. I'm not new to photoshop and this help in learning more about masking etc as part of the process, but they dont show up like whats presented Second tutorial I used where it doesn't look like whats presented. This one didn't even even turn out. I want to learn and do it on my own without actions, but its so long and tendentious and you dont know why it didn't turn out.
great tutorial! but i followed steps and set the settings as you show but horizontal and vertical lines doesn't appear as bold, vivid as yours. Even both line's opacity is full 100% , but they are very transparent, hard to see. What mistake i did? I dont get it. I will be glad if someone tell me how to fix this problem.
The unfortunate thing about this method is that it requires that you have already created an isometric rendering of the scene. It won't work with a normal photo. A normal photo won't have perfectly parallel vertical lines.
Great tutorial; it's useful especially for axonometric drawings: you can apply these pseudo editing lines for all directions of the axonometric view. 💜
Please make more tutorials mam. Helps alot to archi students
Thank you. I did both this image and the image linked to from the Envato Tuts page and both came out great thanks to the steps you set out :).
I loved it! I used this tutorial to make a sketch of a logo that I made many years ago and lost its sketchs. It looks very real. Thank you so much.
Glad it helped!
Very clever - I especially liked your use of 'filter - minimum' and later, the vertical and horizontal blur. Great tricks to make an excellent end result! Thanks a lot, MZ!
Thanks for the tutorials and the written online steps. I'm not new to photoshop and this help in learning more about masking etc as part of the process, but they dont show up like whats presented
Second tutorial I used where it doesn't look like whats presented.
This one didn't even even turn out.
I want to learn and do it on my own without actions, but its so long and tendentious and you dont know why it didn't turn out.
Genialne. Dzięki!
The best channel ♥️🔥😍
thanks 👍 lot ma'am, u made it so easy, enjoyed lot
Very good! Thank you for this video!
Well elaborated... Good tutorial... thanks!!!
Thanks
Nice
great tutorial! but i followed steps and set the settings as you show but horizontal and vertical lines doesn't appear as bold, vivid as yours. Even both line's opacity is full 100% , but they are very transparent, hard to see. What mistake i did? I dont get it. I will be glad if someone tell me how to fix this problem.
Same. i had the same problem too.
thanks
its good but the effect was not so great for my rendered image how can i make it better?
The unfortunate thing about this method is that it requires that you have already created an isometric rendering of the scene. It won't work with a normal photo. A normal photo won't have perfectly parallel vertical lines.
You can modify first the perspective of the photo and then do the rest
that's a lot of steps 😅
@J H using a Photoshop Action! :D
I can’t follow up. Tutorial too hard