The Earth In 7 Minutes

1) Create a new image 800 x 800, color pure black

2) create a new layer above it, name it planet

3) select the elliptical marquee tool, hold down shift and drag out a perfect circle, leaving about 50-60 pixels open on all sides of the circle

example 3

4) fill the circle with white - do NOT deselect

5) change your foreground color to 94,94,198. Background color pure white. NOTE: the color used for the foregound is very important to the formation of your land masses. If the color is too blue they will be pink instead of brownish.

example 5

6) While holding down the shift key choose filter -> render -> clouds

7) While holding down the shift key choose filter -> render -> difference clouds

8) hit cntrl (cmd) F to re-apply the last filter - the blue / white pattern returns

9) Repeat step 8 as many times as required until you have a nice "cloud" pattern, along with some nice land masses (it can take up to 15-20 times to get a nice one)

example 9

10) Once you have a nice looking pattern deselect your "planet". Find a nice clumpy cloud pattern & draw a round selection around it, almost to its edges. (HINT: if you can find a nice "clump" near the edge grab it, but make sure you are NOT selecting outside of the planet. This gives a really nice effect later)

11) With the selection intact choose filter -> liquify

12) Using a brush size that is slighty smaller than the selection area and a brush pressure of NO more than 50% (40% is ideal) choose the twirl CCW feature and gently twirl the cloud formation (DONT get too crazy here or it wont look real)

13) Repeat steps 10 -12 if you'd like on a seperate "cloud formation"

14) You may also "twirl" a few clouds W/O a selection to add some roundness to the formations. Purely optional though.

15) Once you have all the clouds you would like hit cntrl (cmd) D to make sure everything is deselected.

16) Making sure you have your planet layer selected (cntrl click the layer) choose filter -> distort -> spherize with an amount of 100% and normal mode

17) Starting to look like something! OK we need to add that slight haze earth always has. Deselect your plant and create a new layer behind your planet layer, name it glow.

18) Set your foreground color to white, choose the gradient tool, click the radial gradient option, click the gradient drop down & choose foreground to transparent. Drag a gradient out from the middle of your glow layer to about 3/4 of the way to the edge of the canvas. We only want a slight glow to protrude past the planet edges so try it one or twice to get it right, hiding the planet layer as needed. It takes a little bit to get it right.

19) OK lets attack these edges and make this thing look REAL. Cntrl click your planet layer to select the planet. Choose select -> modify -> contract and input 3 pixels then choose select -> modify -> feather and enter 2 pixels. Then choose select -> inverse (shift-cntrl(cmd)-I). Now make sure your planet layer is the active layer and choose filter -> blur -> glaussian blur and enter an amount of 3. Click OK.

20) Looking COOL! Now the final adjustment will crispen up the colors a tad. First merge your glow and planet layer (cntrl (cmd) E) then choose image -> adjustments -> levels Make sure you are on the RGB level and drag the bottom slider (shadows) up ever so slightly. Drag the center slider (midtones) up a hair also & the top slider (highlights) down just to "perk up" the clouds and make them look fluffy.

example 20

Thanks to Dave Dalton, from www.davidcdalton.com - for allowing us to use this amazing tutorial.


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