How to make water splashes in Photoshop tutorial

This Photoshop tutorial shows you how to make those exciting water splashes and add them to photos to really make them pop! Spoiler alert, these are much easier to do that you think, check out the video and see for yourself and then share your water splash effects with the rest of us over at the CAFE Facebook page (join here – it’s safe and free).

We are having a contest for the best water Splashes  images over in our CAFE Facebook page (join here – it’s safe and free). Its free to enter and you could win a free premium PhotoshopCAFE tutorial. 

A while back, I was fortunate to have one of my photographs featured on the cover of Photoshop User Magazine. (for a cover story i wrote).

This was a photo of model Llana that I captured in my studio.

I then Added the water splash and 3D effect for a tutorial that I wrote in the magazine.

 

Because this effect was so well received, I decided to make a quick Photoshop tutorial here at PhotoshopCAFE.  This tutorial gets directly to the point and I show you exactly how I make my water splash effects. Check out the video above and read the text below to see all the steps.

For this tutorial, rather than use my own photos, I decided to grab a couple of images from Adobe stock: This way you can grab them yourself and follow along.

 

Become an Adobe Stock Contributor: https://adobe.ly/2qdDFRH
10 free images from Adobe Stock https://adobe.ly/2pnpTe4

Step 1: prepare the image

I combined the dancer with the background, (How to combine a person with a background tutorial)

 

Then we really make it pop with the water splashes (watch the video tutorial at the top of the page)

Step 2: Create the splashes

In this case, we are going to make brushes out of the splashes. The advantage to this method is that its really easy to reuse the splashes for other things and it’s really fast to work. The disadvantage is that you don’t get to keep all the original colors. (I’ll be doing a second tutorial next week that shows another method that preserves the colors).

a: Open your image that contains your splashes, here is the stock photo, linked above.

b: Make a selection around it with the rectangular marquee tool.

 

 

c: (Optional) If the image lacks contrast, then press Cmd/Ctrl+L for levels. Move the Black triangle to the right

d: Choose edit>define Brush

Choose the bush tool from the toolbar and select your new brush. Tap on your page to paint with the brush. Pressing the [ or ] keys will change the brush size.

Here are some painting tests to see it works. Continue these steps with different splashes to make a series of brushes.

 

Step 3: adding the splashes to the photo

a. Select the brush tool (b key)

b. Choose white as your foreground color, so we will make white water.

c. Choose the Splash brush to paint with.

d. create a new layer to paint on. In this case I made the layer behind the dancer image.

c. Resize the brush [ or ] keys. With Opacity turned up to 100, I tapped once with the brush to create the water.

d. Feel free to reposition, rotate, and scale the water. This is why its on a new layer.

Here I have made the background black, just so you can see the water better.

This time I chose another brush and added more splashes on a new layer.

To manipulate splashes, choose a new layer and tap with another brush. Press Ctrl/Cmd+T for free transform. Drag around the bounding box to scale, rotate and stretch the water into the position you like.

Keep adding more splashes, all of these are behind our dancer.

Also, add some splashes in front of our dancer and manipulate the water to do what you want it to do. (Feel free to use liquify too).

And this is what it looks like when I show the original background (watch the video at the top to see all the painting in real time).

Each splash is on its own layer. This is what the layers panel looks like.

 

Here is the final result where I have pushed the colors a little bit using Camera Raw. (lightroom settings are identical)

 

This is the same process used to make the funky colored splashes like you see here. (to do this, I just selected the water layers into  group and applied a colored gradient over the top

1. Select all the water layers in the layers panel

2. Press Cmd/Ctrl+G tp put them in a group, or Layer>merge layers (Ctrl/cmd+E) to make a single layer out of all the splashes.

3. Lock transparency in the layers panel

4. Apply a colored gradient and tune the colors.

 

 

 

Thanks for hanging out with us here at the CAFE

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Colin

Layer Blending Modes. Free eBook by Colin Smith
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Also, check out our ultimate guide to layer blending modes in Photoshop. All the blend modes explained and practical ideas to use them, tutorials,  explanations and a video overview.

Layer Blending Modes. Free eBook by Colin Smith (Yes, really free)

Grab your free PDF ebook right now. We were going to sell this for $9.99, but figured we would give it away instead and see what happens 🙂

blending-modes-free-ebook

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