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January 20, 2016 11:24 am

How to Create a Shiny 3D Text Effect in Adobe Photoshop

Final product image
What You'll Be Creating

3D text effects can be created in many different ways, but Photoshop's 3D tools and settings are a fun way to do it. This tutorial will show you how to play around with the material textures and settings, as well as the lighting, to create a shiny wrapped text effect. Let's get started!





Tutorial Assets


The following assets were used during the production of this tutorial:




1. Create the Background and the Text



Step 1



Create a new 1250 x 1000 px document.



Then, create the text in All Caps using the font Franks Regular, and set the Size to 280 pt.

Create the Text


Step 2



If you have more than one line of text, change the Leading value to 250, and change the Tracking to a value that you like. Here, the Tracking value of the second line of text is set to 100.



Text Settings




2. Create the Shape Layers



Step 1



Right-click the text layer and choose Convert to Shape. Duplicate the shape layer and rename the copy to Stroke.



Create the Shape Layers


Step 2



With the Stroke layer selected, pick the Direct Selection Tool.

In theOptionsbar,change the Fillto None, the Stroke Color to #e5bf25, its Size to 2, and click the Set shape stroke type icon to change its Align to Outside.



Stroke Settings





3. Create the 3D Layers



Step 1



Select each shape layer you have and go to 3D > New 3D Extrusion from Selected Path, to convert it into a 3D layer.



Create the 3D Layers


Step 2



Select both 3D layers and go to 3D > Merge 3D Layers.



Merge 3D Layers


Step 3



To access the 3D mesh settings and properties, you’ll need to open two panels: the 3D panel and the Properties panel (both found under the Window menu).



The 3D panel has all the components of the 3D scene, and when you click the name of any of those, you’ll be able to access its settings in the Properties panel. So make sure to always select the tab of the element you want to modify in the 3D panel before you change its settings in the Properties panel.



3D and Properties Panels






4. Adjust the Mesh Settings



Step 1



Select the text mesh tab in the 3D panel, and change its Extrusion Depth in the Properties panel to 70.



Extrusion Depth


Step 2



Click the Cap icon at the top of the Properties panel, and then change the Bevel Width to 2%, the Contour to Cone, and the Inflate Strength to 10.



Cap Settings


Step 3



Select the Stroke mesh tab and change its Extrusion Depth to 35.



Extrusion Depth





5. Create the Front Inflation Material Texture



Step 1



Select the text's Front Inflation Material tab, and then click the Diffuse texture icon in the Properties panel, and choose Edit Texture.



Edit Diffuse Texture


Step 2



This will open a file with the shape layer used to create the 3D mesh.



Change the shape layer's Fill color to #61129d.



Change Fill Color


Step 3



Pick the Rectangle Tool, and then create a thin (a Height value of 15 px) horizontal rectangle across the top of the text. Fill the rectangle with the color #e5bf25, then duplicate it.



Create a Rectangle


Step 4



Press the Command-T keys to enterFree Transform Mode, and drag the copy rectangle a bit downwards, depending on how much space you want to leave between the stripes.



Hit the Return key to accept the changes.



Duplicate and Move the Rectangle


Step 5



Now press the Option-Command-Shift-T keys a couple of times, to duplicate the rectangle with the transformation, until you cover the text.



When you're done, select all the rectangle layers, go to Layer > Merge Shapes, and rename the merged layer to Stripes.



Go to File > Save to save the changes made before you move on to the next step.



Merge the Stripes





6. Create the Reflection and Bump Textures



Step 1



With the texture file still open, go to File > Save As, and save a copy of the file with the name Reflection.



Make sure to save this in your project's folder so that it's easier to locate later on.



Save the Reflection Texture


Step 2



Change the text shape's color to #535353.



Change the Shape Color


Step 3



Double-click the Stripes layer to apply a Pattern Overlay effect using the Satin Pattern.



Pattern Overlay


Step 4



Save this file.



Save the File


Step 5



Save the file as a copy with the name Bump.



Save the Bump Texture


Step 6



Change the text shape color to #1c1c1c, and save the changes.



Change the Shape Color


So now you should have two files, one for the Reflection texture with the light gray color, and one for the Bump texture with the dark gray color.





7. Adjust the Material Settings



Step 1



Go back to the original 3D Scene document, and select the text's Front Inflation Material tab.



Click the Reflection folder icon and choose Load Texture, and then open the Reflection texture you created in the previous step.



Repeat that to load the Bump texture as well.



Load the Reflection and Bump Textures


Step 2



As for the rest of the material settings, change the Specular color (in RGB) to (75, 55, 9), the Shine to 25, the Reflection to 70, and the Bump to 2.



Material Settings


Step 3



Select both the Beveland the Back Inflation Material tabs for the text mesh, and then change the Shine to 25 and the Reflection to 70.



Material Settings


Step 4



Select the text mesh Extrusion Material tab, and then click the Diffuse texture icon and choose Remove Texture.



Remove Diffuse Texture


Step 5



Change theDiffusecolor to (70, 9,93), theSpecularcolor to (207, 178, 75), theShineto35, theReflectionto35, and theRefractionto1.656.



Material Settings


Step 6



Select all theStrokemesh material tabs, and change theShineto30and theReflectionto50.



Material Settings


Step 7



Select the Stroke Extrusion Material tab, remove the Diffuse texture, and change its Fill color to (229, 191, 37).



Material Settings



8. Move the Meshes and Change the Camera View



Step 1



Select both mesh layers, click the Coordinates icon at the top of the Properties panel, and change the X Rotation Angle to 90.



Then go to 3D > Move Object to Ground Plane.



Move the 3D Meshes


Step 2



Pick the Move Tool, and use the 3D Axis to place the stroke in the middle of the text mesh.



Move the Stroke


Step 3



Select the Current View tab in the 3D panel, and then pick Top from the View menu in the Properties panel.



Top Camera View





9. Adjust the Lighting



Step 1



Select the Infinite Light 1 tab, change its Intensity to 50, and uncheck its Shadows box.



Infinite Light Settings


Step 2



Click the Add new Light to Scene icon at the bottom of the 3D panel, and choose New Point Light.



Add a Point Light


Step 3



Change the Point Light's Color to (249, 247, 238), its Intensity to 30, its Shadow Softness to 30, and check the Light Falloff box.



Set the Inner value to 470 and the Outer value to 830. You can use any other values you like depending on the result you're looking for.



Point Light Settings


Step 4



Use the Move Tool and the 3D Axis to move the lights around, and adjust the settings until you like the result you get.

You can change the camera view to do that, and then go back to the Top view once you're done.



Move the Lights


Step 5



Click the Environment tab in the 3D panel, and then click the IBL texture icon in the Properties panel, and choose Replace Texture.



Load the Apartment Stock 13 image, and change the Intensity to 50.



Environment Settings


Step 6



You can use the Move Tool to move the texture image around until you like the result you get.



Move the Light Texture


Step 7



Place image 17 from the Premium Blur Backgrounds bundle below the 3D layer, and go to Edit > Transform > Flip Vertical.



You can use a simple gradient fill for the background, or add a Gaussian Blur to an image you have, or use any other texture you like.



After you add the background, take some time to adjust the different lights, move them around, and even move the meshes, until you get a result you like.



Add the Background Texture



10. Render the Scene and Create a Copy



Step 1



When you're done, go to 3D > Render. The rendering might take a while, but you can stop it any time by pressing the Esc key.



Render the Scene


Step 2



Once the rendering is done, right click the 3D Scene layer, and choose Convert to Smart Object.



Convert the 3D Layer into a Smart Object


Step 3



Duplicate the smart object layer, make it invisible by clicking the eye icon next to it, and then right-click the copy and choose Rasterize Layer.



Rasterize the Smart Object Copy





11. Fix the Edges of the Jagged Stripes and Adjust the Coloring of the Text



Step 1



If you zoom in a little bit, you can see that some of the stripes have jagged edges. We'll fix those to get a more polished final result.



Zoom into the Jagged Edges


Step 2



Pick the Spot Healing Brush Tool, choose a slightly soft round brush tip, and then paint over the jagged areas to remove them.



It's important to paint small areas as precisely as possible, and not go over the whole line at once.



Remove the Jagged Edges


Step 3



You can also use the Stamp Tool when necessary, but the Spot Healing Brush Tool should do the job just fine.



Use the Stamp Tool


Step 4



Just make sure to zoom in on the stripes you have, and fix any jagged edges, until you have nice, clean text.



Fix All the Jagged Edges


Step 5



Click the Create new fill or adjustment layer icon at the bottom of the Layers panel and choose Levels.



Add a Levels Layer


Step 6



Click the Clip to layer icon, and change the Shadows value to 3.



Levels Settings





12. Add the Stars Texture



Step 1



Open the second image from the Deep Space 10K Backgrounds Vol2 images in Photoshop. Because these images are huge, you'll need to go to Image > Image Size, and set the Resolution to 72.



Duplicate that image on top of all the layers you have in the original document and rename its layer to Stars.

Right-click the Stars layer, and choose Convert to Smart Object, and then resize it as needed.



Change the Stars layer's Blend Mode to Screen and its Opacity to 50. Then duplicate it, and change the copy's Opacity to 30.



Add the Stars Texture


Step 2



With the copy Stars layer selected, go to Filter > Blur Gallery > Iris Blur.Click-drag the transition points to the center of the pin you have.



Iris Blur Pins


Step 3



Set the Blur value to 15, and then, under the Effects tab, change the Light Bokeh to 80%.This will create a nice bokeh effect. You can play around with the values to get different results.



Iris Blur Settings


Step 4



This is optional, but we're going to remove the original stars below the bokeh.



To do so, select the Stars layer and click the Add layer mask icon at the bottom of the Layers panel.



Then, pick the Eraser Tool, choose a soft round brush tip, and set the Foreground color to White.Select the mask thumbnail, and click to remove the light under each bokeh circle you have.



Erase Bokeh Stars


Step 5



Again, feel free to use any textures or effects you like. You can even change the text and stripe colors, change the camera view, change the lighting, etc. Just have fun with it and make it your own!



Finished Result



Congratulations! You're Done



In this tutorial, we created a piece of text and converted it into shapes, and then into 3D meshes.



We worked on the 3D meshes' settings, textures, and materials to create the main effect.Then we worked on the lighting, rendered the scene, and added some textures for the background and the bokeh effect.



Finally, we used a blur filter and a layer mask to enhance the final result.



Please feel free to leave your comments, suggestions, and outcomes below.


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