Photoshop Tutorial: Old Paper

Photoshop Tutorial: Old PaperI often create neat effects in Photoshop, but I just as often forget how to recreate them simply because I quickly move on to other unrelated projects. I began to piece together some neat old treasure-map-like paper yesterday and realized that I didn’t want to forget how to make it this time. Thus, this mini tutorial on the creation of old, burned paper was born.

  1. Create a new transparent image, filled with black. I started with 800 by 600.
  2. Use the rectangular marquee to select a rectangle about 50 pixels inside each edge.
  3. Fill the selected area with white, and deselect
  4. Apply filter -> brush strokes -> spatter, set at a mid-range smoothness and whatever radius looks good to you. I used a radius of 21 and smoothness set at 8.
  5. Using a contiguous, aliased magic wand with a low tolerance, select the white in the middle of your image.
  6. Invert the selection, delete, then deselect.
  7. Rename this layer ‘paper’, and lock the transparent pixels.
  8. Create a new normal layer called ‘background’. Fill it with black, and put it behind the ‘paper’ layer.
  9. Select a medium parchment-like foreground color, and a medium-to-dark brown background color. It will be lightened later.
  10. Apply filter -> render -> clouds.
  11. Apply filter -> texture -> grain, with a low intensity of your choosing, contrast set to 50, and grain type as contrasty.
  12. Create a new color burn layer called ‘burn’, positioned in front of the ‘paper’ layer.
  13. On the ‘burn’ layer, use a medium-sized, soft-round airbrush with a medium brown color to brush the edges. Repeat up to four times, each time with a darker brown color and smaller brush than before. I started with a 100-pixel brush and ended up painting the final black with a 45-pixel brush.

Eureka! The islands and images seen on the example I later added for effect.

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Responses

9 Responses to “Photoshop Tutorial: Old Paper”

  1. Response #1
    zk0 (IP) on November 16th, 2005 at 12:20 pm

    Great. Thanks! I will test this tutorial out on a school project im working on. :)

  2. Response #2
    Frank Moore (IP) on April 7th, 2006 at 9:06 am

    That was excellent! I’ve tried it out and it works REALLY well !!! Thanks a lot man!

  3. Response #3
    Styx (IP) on April 14th, 2006 at 12:16 pm

    nice it was very use full for one of my projects, thx :)

  4. Response #4
    vic (IP) on April 24th, 2006 at 10:08 am

    Simple yet very effective.cheers
    Vic

  5. Response #5
    Matt (IP) on June 23rd, 2006 at 4:52 pm

    Thanks for the tutorial. Nice work.

    For those of you who want smoother edges after using this tutorial, you may find this useful:

    On the paper layer, add the following style:
    Bevel and Emboss
    Style: Inner Bevel
    Technique: Smooth
    Depth: 121%
    Direction: Up
    Size: 1px
    Soften: 1px
    Angle (put a dot right in the center of the angle circle).

    Enjoy!

  6. Response #6
    thoor (IP) on August 7th, 2006 at 3:00 am

    Witam wszystkich jest fajnie. Dobry tutorial wreszcie coś konkretnego szukalem i wreszcie znalazlem

  7. Response #7
    katerina katz (IP) on November 8th, 2006 at 5:08 am

    Thanks!
    Useful an great. Used it with different brushes with burn

  8. Response #8
    marea shapiro (IP) on April 8th, 2007 at 1:32 pm

    cool and simple
    nice effect!
    many thanx!

  9. Response #9
    Efrain Mexico (IP) on December 17th, 2007 at 10:50 am

    Very effective! nice work!

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