Photoshop for Surface Pattern Design: Putting Your Original Artwork into Repeat | Raelene Boylan | Skillshare
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Photoshop for Surface Pattern Design: Putting Your Original Artwork into Repeat

teacher avatar Raelene Boylan, Textile & Surface Designer

Watch this class and thousands more

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Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Lessons in This Class

    • 1.

      Introduction and Class Description

      2:19

    • 2.

      Lesson 1 Creating Original Tonal Motifs

      4:18

    • 3.

      Lesson 2 Separating Motifs from Background

      10:14

    • 4.

      Lesson 3 Removing Unwanted Marks from Artwork

      7:21

    • 5.

      Lesson 4 Putting Motifs on Separate Layers

      7:53

    • 6.

      Lesson 5 Creating Seamless Repeat

      11:04

    • 7.

      Lesson 6 Recoloring Tonal Artwork

      12:48

    • 8.

      Lesson 7 Saving Repeat for Print on Demand

      3:59

    • 9.

      Lesson 8 Creating the Class Project

      10:04

    • 10.

      Final Thoughts

      0:19

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About This Class

This class is for you if you would like to learn how to take your original artwork in to photoshop and create a seamless repeat pattern. Using the NEW Pattern Preview is so much easier to create repeats! While completing a class assignment, you will learn an abundant amount of photoshop tools to remove the background, clean up unwanted marks, separate motifs into seperate layers, create a seamless repeat with Pattern Preview and recolor the artwork. You will finish the class with a beautiful portfolio piece and a seamless repeat pattern you can upload to Print on Demand sites. 

Water Color Hearts Scan 300dpi

Mac to PC keyboard conversion 

How to scan with an i-phone

how to scan with an android phone or google drive

Course Syllabus

Photoshop: Create a Seamless Repeat Pattern Using Your Original Artwork.

 

Instructor: Raelene Boylan   www.raeleneboylan.com    https://www.instagram.com/bluejoy_studios/

 

Supplies: Raelene is using Canson Cold Press Watercolor paper, Windsor and Newton watercolor paint, a 4H pencil, and a ruler. You may prefer to use gauche, acrylic, pastels, colored pencil, pen and ink, marker, or even a crayon on basic copy paper.

 

Lesson 1: Creating Original Artwork

Your instructor will be using watercolor to paint several heart motifs. Students are encouraged to follow along and create their own motifs using the medium of their choice. Creating hearts will allow you to follow closely with the exercises, but any tonal motif will be fine.

 

Lesson 2: Removing the Background of Your Artwork

Students will learn how to remove the white background of the paper they created their motifs on.

 

Lesson 3: Cleaning up unwanted marks in your motifs such as pencil marks.

Students will learn how to clone, or spot heal to clean up artwork.

 

Lesson 4: Putting Your Motifs into Separate Layers

In preparation to be able to move motifs around individually within your repeat.

 

Lesson 5: Creating a seamless repeating pattern.

We will use our motifs to create a random toss pattern with the Pattern Preview and Transform tools.

 

Lesson 6: Recoloring your tonal motifs.

 

Lesson 7: Saving Repeat for Print on Demand

Students are shown how to save repeat tile to upload to POD sites.

 

Lesson 8: Creating the Class Project

Students are encouraged to share their 8x10 repeating pattern sheet labeled with their name or logo. Both the class assignment and/ or repeats created with their own specific artwork are welcomed! We will also discuss the proper way to save your document depending on what you are using it for.

 

Meet Your Teacher

Teacher Profile Image

Raelene Boylan

Textile & Surface Designer

Teacher

Hi, I am a textile/surface designer who designs print and pattern for apparel, home and paper goods companies. You can learn more about me and view my portfolio at www.raeleneboylan.com.

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Level: All Levels

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Transcripts

1. Introduction and Class Description: Hi, I'm really in boiling. I'm a textile and surface pattern designer. I create prints and pattern for home decor, apparel, and stationary companies. Today, I'd like to teach you how to take your artwork and bring it into Photoshop and create a seamless repeat pattern. Now to accomplish this the most efficiently, I've put together an extra exercise that I would love for us all to follow along with together. And that is creating original art that we can learn. This lesson, that is beginner to intermediate. Then once you've learned the tools, then I'd like you to take that skill set and apply it to your own artwork. For this exercise, you don't need to run out and buy a bunch of fancy watercolor paper or watercolor paint. I will put what I'm using in the class resources. But whatever medium you would like to use, pastel acrylic, colored pencil, even if you have a piece of copy paper and some crayons, that will do the trick. Because the point is, is we're using Photoshop, which is a raster based program. And we're using a raster based program because it is pixel-based. There's millions of different shades of pixels. So it's going to keep that tonal quality of our artwork. So I'd love for you to follow along step-by-step. I'm going to teach you everything you need to know to get your artwork into repeat. You will not even believe how much you're learning as you go along. And by the time you're done with the class, you will have a beautiful portfolio piece and a repeatable pattern that you could upload to, let's say, a print on-demand site like Spoonflower or society six. And then I would love to see your heart print, but I'd also love to see if you've experimented with some of your own artwork and that you can share that with the class as well. So let's go ahead and get started. I cannot wait to see everything that you guys create. 2. Lesson 1 Creating Original Tonal Motifs: Okay guys, let's get started with painting our hearts. And you can see here, I've taken my ruler and drawn a light line just to give me a guide so that I can keep my heart somewhat symmetrical, but we want them to look hand-drawn. So this is just giving us a little bit of a guide. So I want them to look a little different. But I like to use little guidelines from time to time. Now you guys don't have to do them as symmetrical. You can do them however you want. Then I'm going to take some of my paint. I'm using Winsor and Newton, Winsor red. Now I know I also want a little more in here. Loading up my brush. When I go in. I really want to focus on these outlines and I'll show you that when we get into the class, why the edges are so important. But I want a nice solid edge if I can get it. But then I'm gonna come in and fill in the rest. Now the whole idea of this class is to work with watercolors because we're gonna be putting this into repeat in Photoshop. And watercolors are tonal. I've drawn eight hearts and we're going to use probably five. So out of these eight, I'm hoping to get five really good ones. 3. Lesson 2 Separating Motifs from Background: Okay, Now it's time to bring our scan in. So go to file open and look for where you saved your scan. If you don't have a scanner hooked up to your computer, you can scan using your phone. And I've put some links in the class resources for you to see how you can do that pretty easily. So I'm here with my scan and I've got the background layer that's locked. What I like to do is keep this background layer locked and go to layer and duplicate layer. Then I'll turn off the background layer just because I like to keep that for safekeeping. It's just something I've always done. If I make a mistake, I can just go back and get the background layer. And now I have my background copy. And I want to remove my heart's, my painted watercolor hearts. And you may have used a different medium. And that's great. And I'm just using watercolor as a way to show you how to handle tonal motifs. So I want to remove these watercolor hearts from the background. I'm gonna go to my magic wand tool. I'm going to change my tolerance to 30, which means it's going to find the pixel that I pick on, plus a range of pixels that are very close to that arrange with the 30. So I'm going to click and it's selected the white background. It's even gone in. And I'm going to Command Plus to zoom in a little bit here. It's even gone in and got some of my gray lines. So it's done a really good job of selecting the background. Now there are some areas I can see that I might want to get rid of. Here. The gray line was not in that 30 pixel tolerance. So what I'm gonna do is I'm going to go to my last Sue tool. And I'm going to hold down my Shift key. And I don't know if you could see that, but there's a plus sign. When I'm holding down the plus sign, that means I want to add these pixels to my selection. In this case, the selection is the background that we're trying to get rid of. Now you don't have to worry about getting every little edge because I have a little trick for that. Then I'm going to show you in a minute. So plus is to add it to the selection and see how I can adapt into the heart there. And Option on the Mac is how to subtract it from the selection. So Shift key on the Mac is add to selection, option is subtract. I also have a MAC key to Windows key conversion chart in the resources as well. So here's another little area I could get real quick if I wanted to shift with my last Sue tool and add those to my selection. I'm going to Command minus sign to zoom back out. And I'm going to just look around to see if there's any other areas. And I see here in the heart, I have some white areas within my motif that I do not want to be cleared out. I don't want those to be transparent. I want to keep that white highlight or whatever it is in my motif. I want to keep it in my mom motif. I'm going to hold down my Option key and I'm going to take those pixels out of the selection so that they will not be cleared. And that will maintain those light white pixels in my motif. And then over here I'm going to shift to add these on the side to the selection that's going to be cleared. Okay, Let's zoom back out again. And now I'm ready to hit the delete key. Now this grid is showing me that that's a transparent area. So now I have my red hearts on a transparent background. And Command D will get rid of these marching ants. So now we have our artwork on a transparent background. And it looks pretty good because it's on a light background so you can't really see the edges of the hearts. And that's why when I talked about when we're painting the hearts, how if I hadn't gotten a nice edge to my motif, it would really be getting chewed up right now because it would be chewing into all those white pixels. Now, again, you might have white pixels in your motif or light highlights that you want to keep. And then you use the, the tools that I just showed you. But I've got a little trick that I do to make sure that I don't have any halos around my motif. And that is two. I'm going to Command minus sign to zoom out. That is to go to, I'm going to move my tools over a little bit here. Go to the layer. New Fill Layer, Solid Color. Okay, and then pick a very dark color, like black is a good color to use here. And then drag black underneath the background copy. Now let's zoom back in. And now we can see that we do have this halo of white pixels around our heart. So the trick to getting rid of those is to go to your magic wand tool and select the background first. I have to be on the background copy. So select the background and it's going to select the transparency around the hearts. Then I go to Select, Modify, Expand. And I'm going to expand my selection one to two pixels into the heart. And then I'm gonna say, okay, and you see how that moved the selection in. Now, I'm going to zoom in a little so you can see it even better. When I hit the delete key, I just cropped off those white pixels. I could have even gone in a little bit more if I wanted to. But this is something that I do because if I'm going to put this on a different background, my motifs are gonna go maybe even a solid background. I want to know that regardless of my background color, it's always going to look good no matter what color I put it on, whether it's a lighter color or a darker color. Then I'm going to come in and maybe fine tune a little bit. Now, in the interest of time, I'm just going to clean up these three hearts here. So I'm gonna go ahead with my last Sue tool and I'm going to pick my background copy. And I'm going to delete pick the Delete key. I'm just last suing the stuff out of here and hitting the delete key. And then Control D to get rid of your selection. I'm gonna get rid of these two. Let's just get them out of the way. All right, I'm going to focus on these three and I'm going to zoom in and I'm going to use my eraser tool. You can see that I can change the size of my brush. And I'm doing that by using the left bracket and the right bracket from my keyboard. And that's located underneath the f, 11 and F12 keys on your keyboard. The third row down. So I'm going to erase and erase does is it knocks out those pixels and replaces them with the transparency. So now I can just quickly come in and maybe get some things. I don't have to because I got rid of that white halo in one fell swoop. I can just quickly come in and make any necessary changes now with my eraser tool. And it is a hand painted piece, so I don't need it to be exact. In fact, what makes it have a lot of character and handmade qualities is that it does look. It's not perfect. There's different shades of color and the shapes of the hearts are a little different. And I think that's what makes a hand painted piece so interesting and so valuable. It's not just the same motif copied over and over again. Okay, so that looks good. Now next thing I'm going to show you is how to get rid of any pencil marks that you may have in your, your sketch that you want to just quickly touch those up and get these motifs ready. So that's net. 4. Lesson 3 Removing Unwanted Marks from Artwork: Okay, Now we want to get rid of any unwanted marks in our art work, especially before we start copying any of these motifs. You want to do it once you don't want to have to copy it and do it again later. There's two tools that I'm going to use. One is the Spot Healing Brush Tool and the other is the clone, I'm sorry. The clone brush or the clone stamp tool. The, in this case, the spot healing brush, which looks kinda like a band-aid over here in the menu bar. And make sure we're on our background, copy it. It's going to work really well for this exercise because the surrounding area is so similar to the area that we're cleaning. So you can literally just come in paint over it. I'm gonna make my brush a little smaller with my left bracket key. Now, remember this heart is on a transparent background. So if I go off the heart, I'm gonna get some unexpected, unexpected results because I'm trying to spot heal a transparency. So I'm going to edit, undo the last couple that I did. And I'm going to go in with my magic wand tool. I'm going to pick my hearts. But it didn't pick all of the red pixels because my tolerance was only at 30. So this was, I could just hold down my shift key and keep picking, but that's a long way to do it. So what I'm gonna do instead is I'm going to Control or I'm sorry, command D. Control is for the, the PC, command D for the Mac. I'm going to select my background. And then I'm gonna go to select, and I'm going to say inverse. So that was the quickest way for me to pick these three hearts that were on a transparent background. Okay, so now when I'm using my spot healing brush, if I go off of the edge like this, it's not going to let me because I have the heart selected. Software knows that not to paint or erase or do anything else that's outside of the selected area. So look at how quick and easy this spot healing brush is in this case. Now I'm saying in this case because sometimes what you're trying to paint out is maybe a little more complicated. And the area around it isn't as similar. And you might need a little more control than just letting the computer automatically do it with the Spot Healing Brush. So that's why I'm going to also show you the clone stamp. Using the clone stamp tool, we're going to hold down Alt or Option key and then we get a bulls-eye there. And when I click with my mouse, that's the area I'm going to start painting with. Once I let up on my Option key, then I'm going to move that area over to this line and start painting over it. And you can see the plus sign underneath shows me where I'm painting from. This is used when you need a little bit more control. Like if I really wanted to take some of this pink, I could option on the pink and then come painted over here like maybe I wanted to put another highlight in or something. So whenever you hold down the option key or picking up a new starting point. So if I pick up the starting point right here with this line and I put it over here. Can you see how it's duplicating that line and it's just going to keep on painting. Okay, so I'm going to, instead of going to edit undo, since I have several steps I want to undo, I'm going to go over here to my history tool, which is right here. And I'm going to go up a few spots until I see where I started with the clone stamp tool. And I'm going to click that and that will undo everything up until that point. So if you've done several steps and you don't want to go edit undo, edit, undo, edit, undo. You can come over here and backup that way too. Okay, so back to the clone stamp tool. I'm going to Option and pickup right underneath where I want to paint. I like to pick up quite often. Because with the clone tool, you want to be really close to where your painting. So I'm gonna option left button and then start painting. Option left button and then hold and paint option. Okay? But like I said, with this particular example, and especially with pencil lines, I think you'll have good luck with the spot healing brush. And I'm going to increase my brush with my right bracket. And I'm just going to come quickly, very quickly, get those out of there. And then Command minus sign. I'm going to just zoom in Command Plus sign and see how I got a little bit right here. I'm going to make my brush a little smaller with my left bracket because I don't want to necessarily heal more than I have to. So that looks good. And maybe a little bit more over here. And then Command D to get rid of my marching ants. Okay, now we're ready to move on to the next step, which is to take these hearts and put them on their own layers. Right now the three hearts are all on one layer together. And I want to be able to move them around individually. So that's what we're going to learn next. 5. Lesson 4 Putting Motifs on Separate Layers: Okay, Now it's time to put our hearts on separate layers. So let's review what we have over on our Layer menu. We have that original background scan. Then we have our color fill, that black color fill layer that we put to check the edges of our motifs. And then we have our background copy. If I zoom out, Command minus sign will see the size of the original file we opened when we first brought in the scan. So I want to just separate these hearts on their own layers. I'm going to show you a couple of different selection options. The easiest being, because they're already on a transparent or contrasting background. Make sure you're on the right layer. And simply put a lasso around the heart and then go to Layer, New, New Layer via Copy, which is Command J. I use Command J a lot. And if you're gonna be putting artwork into repeats, you probably will be two. So I'm going to select, I want to show you that you can select it from both areas. And then I'm gonna go to my selection tool and I'm going to move that second layer. So it made a copy and notice how it cropped it right to the edges. It did ignored the transparency. And I'm going to go name that layer heart one. Okay, now I want to show you a couple of other options. These are selection tools here. We've got the rectangular, the circle. I could just put a rectangle around it, not even worry about the lasso. That'll work as well. Command J. Oops, I was not on the correct layer. I have to go back to my background copy. Let's try that again. Command J. Go to my selection tool and look at how easy that was. Okay, now this third one, I'm going to do a little differently because I want to show you what contiguous means. I'm going to turn off our two heart layers that we just created. And I'm gonna go back to the background copy. And I'm going to use the magic wand tool with our 30 tolerance. And I'm going to not check contiguous. And do you see how it goes and finds those pixels throughout the whole layer? And then of course I can shift and keep picking and get all of the colored pixels in there. Then I'm going to Command D to get rid of my marching ants are my selection. And I'm going to turn contiguous on and show you what that does. So if I select my pixels on my background copy layer, and it will only select the pixels until it finds a barrier of another color. So as soon as it's surrounded by another color, it will stop. It won't go through the whole layer. So that's what contiguous means. And you'll turn that on and off quite a bit. That's another tool that I use quite often. But in this case, the magic wand tool isn't the easiest one because we've already got it separated on a transparent background. So another tool that sometimes comes in handy, I don't use it as much as the object selection tool. And I probably don't use it as much because it's relatively new. But if your object is surrounded by a relatively contrast color, you can just click on the object and it'll automatically determine where that should end. So practice with these different techniques depending on the colors and the particular image you're working on. Command J. And I just did the same thing. So I have three layers that I did, indifferent selection methods. But I just wanted to go over these selection methods with you. There's the rectangular marquee tool and the last sue, and then the object selection tool. And then there's options under each one. Okay, so now that we have our three layers and I'm going to go ahead and name them hurt one, heart to heart, three. And I'm going to turn off my background copy. And I can even get rid of the background. One that's locked. This is the original scan because I still have that scan saved as a scan. And my background copy is the cleaned up version. This background here that's locked is that original scan that's not cleaned. If I really needed to go all the way back to it, I already have it saved on my desk. So I'm gonna go ahead and just get rid of this by right-clicking on the layer and saying delete layer. Delete the background layer. Yes. Okay, So now we're left with our color, fill our background copy, which is our cleaned hearts, but they're all on one layer and then our three separate Heart Layers. Now, what I'd like to do before we move on to creating a random toss repeat with these three is I want to go over the Edit Transform tool. So I wanna make my motifs relatively the same width and height in this case. So I'm going to, this one's a little narrower than the other two, so I'm going to select it. And I can go to Layer, I'm sorry, Edit Free Transform. And I'll get these transform nodes here. Now if I want to scale it, I simply drag my cursor. If I want to scale it out of proportion, I hold down the Shift key and that will just move the one side that I'm on. So let's say I want to make that a little wider. And then when I want to go back to scaling in proportion, I let up on the shift key and then double-click to accept your changes. Then let's say I want to make this one a little bit smaller so I can either select that with my left button or I come over to my layer menu and select it. Then if I don't want to go up to the Edit Free Transform, I can just use my hotkeys Command T. And command T is something I use all the time. And then I'm just going to shrink that just a tad just to make them a little more even. Okay, so now I have three motifs that are all on their separate layers. So now next we're going to learn how to put these into a tile seamless repeat. 6. Lesson 5 Creating Seamless Repeat: We're getting very close to creating our tolerable, seamless repeat. And right now we still have the original size of the scan. And we're going to create a five inch by five inch repeat. So now's a good time to change the canvas size. So to do that, we go to image canvas size. I'm going to select that upper left-hand corner for an anchor type in my repeat size, five-by-five. Okay? It's going to warn me that clipping will occur. So anything that is larger than five-by-five is going to get clipped. And currently our motifs are fine because they're smaller than five-by-five. And it's fine if our background copy gets cropped, It's fine if our color fill gets cropped. So I'm going to proceed. Then I'm just going to move my heart's back where I can see them on the canvas. Now, I want to fill the canvas with hearts. And instead of just using these three, I'm going to create a copy of each one of them. And to do that, I select on the layer. Then that command J, which is the New Layer via Copy. Then I'm going to command T. And then instead of rotating just chat, I'm going to write button and flip horizontal. And I'm going to write button and flip vertical. And then I double-click to accept my changes. So now I have the same two motifs, but they're a little bit different with the other one being flipped. Now let's go to the next heart. Command J to copy the layer Command T to transform right button to get the flip horizontal, right button to get the flip vertical, double-click to accept my changes. And then let's do the same thing to the third heart. So I select it to select the layer, command J to copy the layer. And then Command T to get into the transform mode. Right button flip horizontal, right button, flip vertical. Okay, So then double-click to accept your changes. Now I have six unique motifs. It's absolutely fine to copy your motifs, but I like to flip them and scale them a little differently just to make them all look a little bit unique. I think that really adds to the quality of a handmade, hand painted piece. Okay, So now the point we've been waiting for is we go to View pattern preview. And it's going to tell us Pattern Preview works best with smart objects, which is true. But I want to show you what happens if we don't make our motifs smart objects. So here we have our pattern P preview, we have our center repeat, and then we have the copies. So as the center repeat is the original copy. So as I move that motif up and down, you see it coming back up the bottom. And that's why when we're done with the center Tylenol repeat, after we've moved all our motifs around, it will be in perfect repeat. This is a relatively new feature in Photoshop. It used to be a lot more difficult to get a piece of artwork into repeat. So now if I go to Command T transform, because I want to rotate, you see what it does. It, it's splitting that motif and half because I didn't create a smart object first, the software doesn't realize that what I do to the, whatever I do to a copy is what is happening to the original and vice versa. So let's escape out of there. That's edit, undo our pattern preview. And now let's go over to our Layer menu. And let me just close this up so we can see our Layers better. And I'm going to click my layer and a right button at Convert to Smart Object. Click the layer right button, Convert to Smart Object. And I'm going to continue until I have all of my my layers are converted to smart objects. I don't need to do the background copy. I'm not using the background copy in the repeat. I'm just using my individual motifs. So now let's go back to View Pattern Preview. It's giving us the same warning, but we're okay because we have changed them all to pattern or smart objects now. Now I'm gonna do the same thing I did before. Command T to transform. And now look what happens, see how when I move the original, the copy does the same thing. They're tied to each other. Everything is tied to that original motif. And then double-click to accept my changes. And now I'm gonna just go and command T and start moving and rotating things around. Double-click to accept my changes. Command T, rotate. Double-click to accept your changes. Select your layer Command T. You can see where I'm rotating. I get that little rotation arrow. Okay, So if some don't, some rotation, definitely not exactly where I want to be, but one of the things that I do that sometimes helps is I get everything into an angle like something like this. Now, I don't necessarily want my repeat to look like diagonal stripes, but it helps me to have a starting point. I'll get them on those diagonal stripes. And then I'll just start tweaking from there. Making can squint and see where do you see some tracking? Where do you see where's your eye being pulled? I see some areas here that maybe something can be moved over. I just don't want anything to look too obvious that it's going in one direction. To lined up. If you have something that's perfectly vertical, perfectly horizontal, that could create track tracking and that's why I rotated something. I rotated them all. Now I'm going to turn this center blue line off that's indicating what the center tile is. And if you go to View Show, you can turn that off. Okay. So I still see if I squint my eyes, I see a little hole here. And I see kind of a line here and a line here. So I can still kinda see where my repeat is. So I'm gonna just kinda tweak things a little bit more. Maybe get things out of order a little bit. Now this has ended up to be the same motif next to each other. So maybe I want to move these kinda break that up a little bit, maybe even control T, flip this one so that it doesn't look so similar. Okay, so here is our repeat. Now, I'm going to just play around a little bit more, but just keep tweaking, even just a few pixel tweak makes a big difference. You just want to close up any holes that you have. See how I've created a line that's this diagonal. Maybe I need to tweak this a little bit, rotate a little, and close that up so that it doesn't there's not like a big alleyway going through there that you want it to flow through. And sometimes you'll have to offset things a little bit, maybe put things a little closer to one and farther away from the other. Now this is a pretty simple repeat, so it's not like we can't tell, but we just wanted to have some nice flow. I can still see something over here, so alright, well I'm gonna rotate the motifs around and I will meet you back here to learn how to recolor these. But first, let's save this as a Photoshop file. File Save As. And I'm going to save it in my creating a repeat in Photoshop folder. I want it to be a Photoshop file. And I'm going to call it hearts four, which means full repeat. Five by 5300 DPI. Now that just will help me remember when I'm looking at this file in a list of files that this is a full repeat and the size of the tile, and what resolution that was saved at. Now when I save it as a Photoshop file, it remembers everything we did. It remembers the resolution. It remembers all the separate layers. It remembers the smart objects. It remembers everything we did to the smart objects. So that's why we want to save it as a Photoshop file. And then go ahead and hit Save. Okay, I'll meet you back here and we will learn how to recolor our motifs. 7. Lesson 6 Recoloring Tonal Artwork: Okay. I spent a few more minutes rotating and moving my heart's around until I was happy with the arrangement and I know I'm happy with it when I can just glance over it. Maybe squint my eyes a little bit and I don't see anything really sticking out like a sore thumb. This is only a five-by-five repeat with six motifs. And I think it's got some great movement in it. I love how the different color of the watercolor and the toll known as kinda just bounces. And it's, I think it's really well-balanced. And when you see something like this on a black background, Nothing's really glaring. I mean, this is this is putting it under a microscope. So I'm happy with the results. Thus far. I'm gonna go ahead and turn off my center blue line, the pattern preview tile bones. And then I'm going to Command Plus to zoom in a little bit. And now I'm ready to start having some fun with colors. So I'm going to pick up a layer, a heart layer. Now remember we, this little icon down here that looks like a page that tells us that this was a smart object and we did that before we started our repeat. But now when I'm going to start re-coloring it, that's because it's a smart object. It's going to remember the original color. So that's just another advantage of smart object. And then we're gonna go to Image Adjustments, Hue, Saturation. And I'm simply going to move my this arrow along the hue bar and find a color that I like. We're just experimenting and having fun right now. So let's not worry too much about getting the colors just perfect. But I think I'm gonna go for maybe a collection of tones of pinks and reds. I've got that layer where I want it. And then if you notice over here underneath the layer, it gives me a smart, smart filter. So if I wanted to go back and make some changes, I could double-click on that hue saturation and I'll get right back to where I was. Let's say I wanted to lower the saturation, which will move it towards a gray. I'm more of a muted tone. And then if I up the saturation and it'll get really bright. And if I lower the lightness, it'll go too dark. And if I up the lightness, it will go all the way to white. And actually this is a way if you wanted to just make it a flat color, you can do that. Okay, so I'm pretty happy with it in here. Then I'm gonna go to the next layer and image adjustments, hue saturation. I'm going to play around with some colors. They're made me making this one just a tad bit more purple. Get a little multicolor thing going on. Go to the next layer, Image Adjustments, Hue, Saturation. And let's leave that one out. Maybe. Let's go the pink range two. Now I can pick my layer right off the screen if I'd like, if I know I want to change this one. Next. Adjustments, hue saturation. Image adjustments. Hue saturation. Now you are welcome to play around more with other things underneath Image Adjustments. Go ahead and have fun playing around with some of these things. You'll never know what you'll end up with. Another one that I like to use for color is color balance. And that's when you want to add more blue, more red, more pink. So I'm working on this one right here. And if I take the yellow, I'll put more yellow. This is for when you want to just kinda take the color and just up at a little bit. Now when I do a color balance, do you see how it added a new Smart Filter? So I could turn that color balance off. I didn't really do much. Or I could take the color balance and put it in the trash can if I didn't really want it. Now let's go for our last one here and go to image adjustments, hue, saturation and value. And get a nice pink. Okay, I think that's looking good. I've got a pink and purple thing going on. Again, if I want to go back and change anything, if I think this one's too pink, I just select it and double-click on hue, saturation and value over here underneath the smart layer. And I can play around with it. Okay? So now that we have our hearts recolored, and you can do multicolor, whatever color you want to do. Just let your creative activity run wild. Now I'm going to go to my color fill layer and see what background color would look nice with these. I'm going to try picking a color. We'll write out right out of the hearts. And then I can always lower the saturation. Maybe go with a light pink. I can pick out on my color picker. Or I can go up to my screen. For some reason. I'm crazy about blues. I always think everything looks good on Navy or light blue. Okay, so let's say I like this color way. I'm going to go to File, Save. That will save over my existing Photoshop file, but we're not losing anything. I'm just updating the file with all of my new smart filter information because I can turn the eyeball off of the smart filter on every layer and get back to the original. So that is the beauty of Photoshop. You can save all this information in one file and we can keep coming back and changing it and getting more versions out of it. So I've saved this version. I'm liking the navy background with the pink hearts. I going to say I want to fill a page with it or fill a mock-up with it. I want to save that center Tyler bowl. Repeat. So let's turn those blue lines on the tile bounds. So this is our repeat right here. And this is definitely a bright, vibrant repeat. I'm going to save this center pattern in my pattern library. So I go to edit, define pattern. And it's gonna put hearts full five-by-five, 300 DPI. And then here's my bright pink parts on the navy background. Okay, So I've got something I like. I want to show you one other little trick I like to do. Let's say I want to do another version. I want to just soften the colors. I still wanna do pinks, but let's say I just want to soften the pinks. And instead of going back and doing each one individually, I'm going to show you how to combine the layer. So I'm going to select my layers by holding down my shift key. And I can pick the bottom layer, the top layer. And if I'm holding down the Shift key, it will select all the layers in-between. And then I'm going to write button duplicate layers. Okay? So now I have copies and while those copies are all selected, I'm going to write button and look for Merge Layers, and that's going to emerge the selected layers. So now I have one file here up at the top or one layer that has all of my heart's merged together. And they're on transparency because the Navy or this dark teal that's showing through is just our color fill. So that's a separate layer. And I'm going to turn off all of the layers underneath the individual hearts. They're still there. I'm still going to have access to them. I'm probably I can do however many colorways I want to. My heart's content. No pun intended. I go to heart one copy. And this is the pink cards all on one layer. And then I'm gonna go to image adjustments, hue, saturation and value. And this time we're changing the color on all the hearts at once. Because we're working with that layer where we merge them all together. All the other layers are hidden temporarily. So maybe I want them to be a little redder, little more gold or so. You can see how the options are endless here. Okay, so I've got, let's say I want a little bit more red in there. And then, okay. And then I'm gonna put it on a lighter background. So I'm gonna go to my Color Fill and I'm going to pick like a white or maybe a creamy color, light pink or something like that. See here, something like Okay, and then here's a trick I like to do if I think, okay, I just did a bright color way and now I want to do more subtle color away or just want to kind of knock down the color a little bit. I'll put it on a background that's gonna be complimentary, like this light background. It's not going to compete with the colors. And then I'll go to the opacity. So I'm picking on my heart copy. This is the one with all the hearts on the same layer. Then go to opacity and lower the opacity and see how we get a nice soft look. Totally different, look same print. These prints could go on totally different products. And I just change the opacity the same color way. Really. I like this softer color. And I want to be able to fill square or a sheet or a mock-up with this colorway. So I'll go to File. I'm sorry, Edit, Define Pattern. And I'm going to put this one in my pattern library. Now I don't need to specify the color because it's going to be able to see the color in the pattern library. Okay, So that is playing with color. And I've shown you some tools that you can really go wild with and have a lot of fun with. The next thing we're gonna do is we're going to get our class project ready to share with each other and show the world. 8. Lesson 7 Saving Repeat for Print on Demand: Okay, Let's talk a minute about what kind of file do you save to upload your seamless repeat to a print on demand shop. They can't upload your Photoshop file, so we need to save it as a JPEG or tiff and just the center tile. So to do that, go to File, Save As, I'm sorry, save a copy. And save a copy will save the metadata. The resolution that the file is at currently, which is 300 DPI. And it's going to give me some choices here, and I want to save it as a JPEG. And then just hit put it in the same folder that I have my Photoshop file in. A high-quality is good for me. And then okay, so now if I go to open that file that I just saved, you'll see I have my Photoshop file and I'll have my JPEG. I'm going to open up my JPEG. And here I have, if I go to image, image size, a 300 DPI jpeg of just my tolerable repeat. So this is the file that I would upload to a print on-demand site if I wanted to change the resolution to one-fifth, which is usually what I do for Spoonflower, is I would go to Image, image Size, type in 150. Okay? And then I would say File, Save a Copy. And this is my 150 version of a JPEG. So either of those files, those JPEG files can be uploaded to print on-demand. Now if you go to File Export, you'll have some options here to export a JPEG or tiff or some other choices. But if I save that JPEG here, and I wanted very good quality, It doesn't take the, it takes the quality of the file is the same, but it does not save the metadata information of what the current resolution is. So I'm going to call this Export Copy. When I file open that one. And I go to Image, image size. Even though for all intensive purposes, it's still the same quality, but it didn't it didn't take the information that it was at 300 DPI. So it brought it back up as a 72 screen resolution because it didn't know. It looks the same right now, but you could accidentally save over a 300 DPI file with a 72 DPI file if you're not careful. So if you want to print your file, do save a copy. As a JPEG. If you're only going to put your file on the web, like maybe an Instagram post or Something banner. Then go ahead and export as a JPEG. Because we don't need to take up any more space. It will be a much smaller file than the other way. And for viewing on screen and the web, the quality will be fine. It's when we want to print it. We want to make sure we're printing it at 300 DPI. So there's some tips for you on saving your file for print on demand. And the difference between the saving and exporting methods. 9. Lesson 8 Creating the Class Project: Okay, Now we want to save our class project to share with the class, and we will go to File New. And let's create a ten by eight file. So that would be, make sure it's in landscape mode. So 10 " wide by 8 " high. And then we go to Layer, New Fill Layer Pattern. Okay? And remember, we saved our two-color ways in lesson six. I'm going to select my softer colorway. And here is my repeat, doing its thing, repeating seamlessly. I can change the scale. Let's go a little smaller, like maybe 50. Okay, so this is just a ten by eight sheet that I'm using to potentially put in my portfolio or a printout on my home printer. And let's say I want to put my artist's signature on, which I encourage you all to do for sharing your class projects so we know whose is whose. So I'm gonna go to the Font tool. But I want to, there's probably a plenty of fonts that I can use already loaded. But if you have Creative Cloud, which most people will at this point. If you have the latest version of Creative Cloud, you can go to type and say more from Adobe. And you have all of these choices of license free fonts to use courtesy of Adobe Creative Cloud. So let's say I want something that has a brush pen look to it. Like let's say Air Royale or gelato Lux. I'm going to select that style. And I'm going to say activate font. And it's going to tell me that activation was successful. Licensing simplified. You don't have to worry about installation licensing or the limits. All personal and commercial use is covered. Thank you, Adobe. Okay, so now I can go back into my my file, my ten by eight file here. And I'm gonna go look for that file that I just downloaded. And well, here's the gelato lux. And I'm going to just click anywhere on the screen, but I'm going to just put a little tab down here in the lower right-hand corner. You guys can put yours wherever you'd like. Type in my name. And I can select the type while I'm in the type tool over here. And I can make it bigger. And I'm going to move it over to the side. Then I'm going to pick my selection tool just to get off of the Type Tool. And then I'm gonna go select my layer where my name is. And I'm going to just bump it up a little bit with a drop shadow. So pick on this FX. Once I have my name in place, I'm going to select the name from the Layer menu. And I'm gonna go down below to this fx. And I'm going to add a little drop shadow, and that'll just help my signature stand out a little bit. Now you can play around with the opacity, the distance, the angle. You can even change the color. But I'll just stick with black for now. And maybe lower the opacity a little bit and say, Okay, Then if you'd like, you might even want to put a contrast and color behind your, your artist's signature. I'm gonna go over here to the rectangle tool, and I'm going to create a rectangle. Now, if I hold down the option key, let me delete that. If I hold down the option key here, it would put the rectangle right where I want it. Now, it's on top of my name. So I'm going to go over to the Layer menu and I'm going to drag it underneath my name. It now has. If I go to the selection tool and I can move my name around, I can move the rectangle around wherever I want them. Now, the rectangle right now has a I'm a border. So let's go to, let's click on that rectangle. Actually, I'm going to try to get my when you double-click on a font, it takes you into the text mode. I want to take that stroke off of my rectangles. So I go over to here to appearance, pick on that layer. And then I can change the color of that rectangle. I can also change the stroke. I could take, say no stroke, or I could make the stroke thicker. And maybe, maybe I want to leave a border on it and then change the color of the stroke. So there's just a few options there for you to create your artist's signature. You can use the rectangle. You can use the put a border around it. You can put a drop shadow on your name. You could put a drop shadow on the rectangle. And then you have all of those fonts to use. If you go to more from Adobe fonts station will show up. When you use the text tool. They'll show up in your list of fonts. So now I want, this is my class project that I want to post and share with the class. I'm gonna go to File. Now if I want, if I want to print this on my home printer to, I'm gonna do a Save a Copy. And if I want to print it anywhere, even if I'm uploading it. So I'm going to save that in my creating repeat in Photoshop file. And I'm going to call this my pink hearts. Ten by eight. And I want to save it as a JPEG. And then save. And high-quality is more than enough. Now, if you were not going to print this anywhere and you just want to save it, just to post in the class projects. Then you could have done in export, export as a JPEG. And I always use very good pink hertz ten by eight. And it's going to replace the old one. Okay, So there you have it. There's your class project. Now, also, while you have all of your layers over on the right here, you can double-click on this pattern bill and get back to the pattern library. So all of those patterns you save, those colorways you saved will be here along with any other pattern that you've saved. Here's a preview of the next class that I'm working on right now is doing stripes and plants and textures. So that's coming up. Now if you'd like to play around with your own motifs and share that with the class. That would be wonderful as well. Here I'm gonna get maybe one of my. Now this one, this is a watercolor that I did of obviously some lemons. And you notice how I have it in many different colors. I've got the navy background and where, where my lemon prints at. Okay, here's a blue. Even have the linen. So with the tools that I've taught you today, I used those exact same tools to do all of these prints. Some of them are still works in progress like that. One needs a little repeat work because it was something old I did and I didn't say I lost the full repeat, so I've got to redo that. So here's just an example of other things that you can do with your original artwork using the exact same tools we learned today. So I'd love for you to share your heart, colorways and anything else you'd like to share in the class projects. Have fun and I can't wait to see what you create.