Multi-stroked and outlined text.

Z
Posted By
z
Sep 3, 2004
Views
265
Replies
6
Status
Closed
So I can cut to the chase, here’s what I’m trying to copy: http://home.comcast.net/~zebob/p.jpg
The font is Yearbook. I just need to know the technique for pulling this off. The solid inner color is red, if that makes any difference. Thanks for any help.
– Tom

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R
RSD99
Sep 3, 2004
That kind of effect is **much** easier to do in a vector graphics program.

Think Corel Draw, Adobe Illustrator, etcetera.

"z" wrote in message
So I can cut to the chase, here’s what I’m trying to copy: http://home.comcast.net/~zebob/p.jpg
The font is Yearbook. I just need to know the technique
for pulling
this off. The solid inner color is red, if that makes any
difference.
Thanks for any help.
– Tom
E
edjh
Sep 3, 2004
z wrote:
So I can cut to the chase, here’s what I’m trying to copy: http://home.comcast.net/~zebob/p.jpg
The font is Yearbook. I just need to know the technique for pulling this off. The solid inner color is red, if that makes any difference. Thanks for any help.
– Tom

One way (still leaving the text editable) is to create the first stroke with Stroke in Layer Styles then add a larger one using Outer Glow. You’ll have to adjust the size and spread and opacity to get it to look like a real stroke.


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Z
z
Sep 3, 2004
Thanks. That gets me close.
It rounds the edges instead of keeping them crisp. I’ll see if I can do the same thing in Illustrator.
Much obliged.
-z

On Fri, 03 Sep 2004 22:02:45 GMT, edjh wrote:

z wrote:
So I can cut to the chase, here’s what I’m trying to copy: http://home.comcast.net/~zebob/p.jpg
The font is Yearbook. I just need to know the technique for pulling this off. The solid inner color is red, if that makes any difference. Thanks for any help.
– Tom

One way (still leaving the text editable) is to create the first stroke with Stroke in Layer Styles then add a larger one using Outer Glow. You’ll have to adjust the size and spread and opacity to get it to look like a real stroke.
J
jrzyguy
Sep 4, 2004
most definitely think illustrator (or corel) its just a matter of drawing it there…..and then if you want you can always copy your illusrator drawing into PS as paths.

"z" wrote in message
Thanks. That gets me close.
It rounds the edges instead of keeping them crisp. I’ll see if I can do the same thing in Illustrator.
Much obliged.
-z

On Fri, 03 Sep 2004 22:02:45 GMT, edjh wrote:

z wrote:
So I can cut to the chase, here’s what I’m trying to copy: http://home.comcast.net/~zebob/p.jpg
The font is Yearbook. I just need to know the technique for pulling this off. The solid inner color is red, if that makes any difference. Thanks for any help.
– Tom

One way (still leaving the text editable) is to create the first stroke with Stroke in Layer Styles then add a larger one using Outer Glow. You’ll have to adjust the size and spread and opacity to get it to look like a real stroke.
G
Gadgets
Sep 5, 2004
You can get something similar with layer styles and a gradient stroke, see pic:
http://jaswebpics.com/gradstroke.gif
Just use the shape burst mode and edit the gradient so that the tone/colour changes are sharp (drag those handles in each side of the colour pointers)

For more control, I’d probably load the text as a selection, convert it to a path, then stroke the path with pencil or brush. For the brush stroke, an angled line might give a better shape then just a hard edged circle… For a more precise outline, a duplicated text layer with larger text and no fill would let you fiddle endlessly!

Cheers, Jason (remove … to reply)
Video & Gaming: http://gadgetaus.com
J
jrzyguy
Sep 5, 2004
what exactly are you trying to "pull off"? if you know and have the font…..then what do you need to do? what is our final media going to be?

"Gadgets" wrote in message
You can get something similar with layer styles and a gradient stroke, see pic:
http://jaswebpics.com/gradstroke.gif
Just use the shape burst mode and edit the gradient so that the
tone/colour
changes are sharp (drag those handles in each side of the colour pointers)
For more control, I’d probably load the text as a selection, convert it to
a
path, then stroke the path with pencil or brush. For the brush stroke, an angled line might give a better shape then just a hard edged circle…
For
a more precise outline, a duplicated text layer with larger text and no
fill
would let you fiddle endlessly!

Cheers, Jason (remove … to reply)
Video & Gaming: http://gadgetaus.com

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