![]() ![]() It could probably be made to look better with more time spent on it. I did this quickly for this tut and got this result. You will need to redo the highlight and distort the leaf under each new waterdrop. You can then merge the waterdrop layers, copy and paste onto a new layer, move and adjust the shape to have a few more of them quite easily. When you have deselected you should have something like this. I used the Effects>Distort>Bulge at these settings. Then move down to the leaf layer, and use your preferred method to distort the area underneath the drop. To do this go to the Water drop layer and select anywhere outside the drop, then Ctrl-I to invert the selection. If you want, for a bit more realism, you can distort the image under the water drop. You should end up with something like this. With the primary colour set to white use the Paintbrush to add a small dot at the brightest part of the drop then blur it slightly with Gaussian Blur. These are my settings-Īdjust the opacity of the layer for the best effect. Then go to Effects>Object>Inner Shadow plugin add some internal shadow to the waterdrop. These are my settings but you can experiment. Bear in mind the surface you will be using when making it.Ģ.Then, with the colours default black & white, get the Gradient too land make a Linear Gradient across the selection with the white side nearest to the direction of the light.Set the layer blend mode to Overlay.ģ.Deselect the ellipse (Ctrl-D ), then go to Effects>Object>Drop Shadow and add a shadow to it. Use the Ellipse Select tool to create a water drop shape. Open a suitable image.In my case I have used a leaf but water drops, as we all know, can be found in lots of different places so just choose one you like. These are the ones I used -ĭrop Shadow from KrisVDM`s Plugin Pack hereĪnd the new Inner Shadow from Boltbait`s Plugin Pack here It features an intuitive and innovative user interface with support for layers, unlimited undo, special effects, and a wide variety of useful and powerful tools.This is an updated version of the Waterdrop tutorial first posted by Eraesr using a slightly different technique with newer plugins. Paint.NET is free image and photo editing software for computers that run Windows.
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