My Distressing may be Distressing

I use an old graphics program that I own. I don’t ‘rent’ it. I own it. It’s mine. It’s Paint Shop Pro 7. There are a lot of things I can do with it, but many of them would be easier with a newer program. I understand that, but I’m not renting a program. This post is about how I distress designs to get that vintage look.

I was at a store recently and saw a guy with a shirt that had one word in a ‘varsity’ style, but I couldn’t seen the full word because he was wearing a jacket. It didn’t look like a team name or school name – it looked like it said ‘chocolate’. I thought it would be cool to make a varsity style design that wasn’t for a sport. I wanted the varsity style font, definitely a tail [or swash – that long part that goes under the word] and a distressed look. I chose a font called Fenway and some swashes to go along. I made the word Library, then started distressing it.

To distress, I have a few distressed backgrounds. You can usually find free ones easily through a search and just decide how much distressing you want. You do need layers to distress the way I do.

With your design on one layer, copy the distressed image file you’ve choosen, then start a new layer, select all, and paste the distressed image into the selection. Use a colour selection tool and hit a colour in the the distressed image, then find your selection tool and modify it to ‘select similar’. See if that looks like too much. If it is, try again from using the colour selection tool. You want a small amount of distressed, so you don’t over do it.

Once you have a good amount, switch to the main design image and cut. Is that enough? If you need more, move the selected section around and cut here and there until it looks they way you want.

Random Varsity – Library

library shirt

Here’s a close up:

That’s how the distressing works.

Might be easier if I wasn’t so set on owning a program, but not too hard.

Other Random Varsity designs on Zazzle:

Almost Like a Shadow

Who doesn’t love a silhouette? They stand in place of something and can be nothing or everything. They can be a void to be filled, or a stark reminder of an absence.

I’ve used silhouettes a lot in my designs. I have cat silhouettes:

I have a store on Zazzle that is all silhouettes. It’s called We Have Cookies – a ‘come to the dark side, we have cookies’ reference. I even used a silhouette on my book cover:

There are a lot of places to get silhouettes online, but you can make them yourself. I took a picture of some birds at the top of a tree. Luckily, the lighting was perfect. All I had to do was turn up the contrast and – boom! – a silhouette.

If you have any object or person with a light background, it can easily be a silhouette with some contrast and maybe a little cleaning up. Use it as is, or fill it. You’ll need layers to fill it. With the silhouette on one layer, pick an image or design you want to fill it with. Put that as a bottom layer. Go to the silhouette layer and select the area and delete. The lower layer shows through, and you have a filled silhouette.

If you want the result to stand alone – png with a transparent background – with the silhouette area selected, go to the fill layer and copy and paste as a new image.

Silhouettes are fun and easy to use. They’re very, very versatile. Give them a try!

How I Steal

I read a book a few years ago called ‘Steal like an Artist’ [Austin Kleon]. My main take-away was ‘be inspired’. I was already designing, and I know if I see a design I love, it’s better to buy it from the artist, because anything I try to make like it will not be half as good. It’s their style. I can’t do their style! But I also realized I can see a design and work off of what I like about it.

One of my first ‘steals’ was from a picture of David Cassidy. Honestly don’t know how I came across it. But… that shirt!

David Cassidy
Okay, looks like a credit pic – such a thief!

I wanted to create a design that was similar. It, of course, wouldn’t be the same. It was me, drawing with my magic pen on my screen, but it could give me the same feel of that design. I drew a bunch of tiny blocks with things in them [technical term – take note].

I put them all together and made this on Zazzle:

Primitive Pattern Messenger Bag

This was my first ‘steal’.

Get inspired. Find designs from the past, present, in nature, everywhere, and make them your own. Something that sparks for only you – or so you think – can become something new. You’ll have a unique-to-you design that others will love.