3D Text On Fire with Photoshop

 
Filed under Text Effects

fire-text 3D Text On Fire with Photoshop

This tutorial is going to be a little more advanced than the other ones I have done. It shouldn’t be a problem if you have been following along with our other tutorials or have a grasp of Photoshop. So lets begin.

Open up Illustrator and type out a word of your choice, in my case I used the word “FIRE” in ITC Franklin Gothic Heavy.

Make sure that each letter is in a different text box. Now using Effect>3D>Extrude & Bevel set up your letters in an interesting way, keeping in mind that they are going to be on fire. It doesn’t have to be exactly the same, but something like what I have below. If you are having trouble with the 3D text, you can look at the tutorial on creating 3D text.

Open up Photoshop, and create a new document (I’m using 1680×1050). Fill the background with black. Paste the text you created in Illustrator. Make sure you bring in one letter at a time so they are all on different layers. Resize the text and adjust the angle until you get something that you are happy with.

continue

Share on Facebook




Related Posts :


Subscribe to our feed for news & updates !

Enter your email address :


Related posts :


Text On Wild Fire Effect

Fire text is one of the most classic technique that you can see in Photoshop tutorials. I am trying out another version here using some real fire images, mix with filters and blending methods....


Design fire lines in photoshop tutorial

This tutorial will teach you how to create creative and stylish fire lines in 10 easy steps. For this tutorial your going to need a good stock photo lined up. Something with action…and preferably...


Make 3D text using Photoshop and Illustrator

This week I created a post with the best 50 fantastic 3D text designs I found on the internet.Today I decided to make a tutorial to show you how you can design a 3D...


Adding Fire to Create a Realistic Flaming Guitar

This tutorial will teach you how to add flames to your images. I’ll be discussing a number of techniques that will help you to keep your fiery images looking realistic, not just intense. For...


3D Textured Text Effect with Photoshop and Illustrator

http://www.graphictutorials.net/wp-admin/media-upload.php?post_id=1291&type=image&TB_iframe=true...


Setting a book on fire.Using virtual flames.

Hey everyone, for our first tutorial it will be something rather short, but a nice effect, we will be setting a book on fire in Photoshop CS2, but it can be applied in CS3...


Colorized text effect in photoshop

Make new background with gradient effect. Tipe text letter by letter. Every symbol must be own layer. Select first symbol. In this case letter C. Give him gradient effect. Make sure to chose pastel...


Colorfully Mixture Text Effect

Let’s start by creating a new document which is 1000 pixels wide, 600 pixels high and at a resolution of 300 pixels/inch. Fill the “Background” layer with 75% grey. Get the Type Tool and...


Create a 3D Flowery Text Effect

Create a document of size 750×550 pixels. Set the foreground color to #004B64 and background to #000000. Using the Radial Gradient tool, drag a circular gradient from the top downwards. Open up Adobe Illustrator....


Juicy Text in Photoshop.

Ok, first off were going to need to open a new document. For the tutorial a opened simple small doc, with a dark grey background Now that you have a nice font and a...





Vertical1238097 = false; ShowAdHereBanner1238097 = true; RepeatAll1238097 = false; NoFollowAll1238097 = false; BannerStyles1238097 = new Array( "a{display:block;font-size:11px;color:#888;font-family:verdana,sans-serif;margin:0 4px 10px 0;text-align:center;text-decoration:none;overflow:hidden;}", "img{border:0;clear:right;}", "a.adhere{color:#666;font-weight:bold;font-size:12px;border:1px solid #ccc;background:#e7e7e7;text-align:center;}", "a.adhere:hover{border:1px solid #999;background:#ddd;color:#333;}" ); document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='"+document.location.protocol+"//s3.buysellads.com/1238097/1238097.js?v="+Date.parse(new Date())+"' type='text/javascript'%3E%3C/script%3E"));