Awesome video man. I've been trying to find a simple way to apply this effect to a lot of photos and this is the best process I've seen. Well done. Effective and efficient.
generative fill is just an automated predictive clone feature. it is very possible to create the effect without generative fill, but manually cloning or smudging is still advised around the edges of any cut area. if you choose not to - all that means is that you will not be able to animate objects as much because, when you put the objects in motion, it will expose empty space you left. the more you clone or fill, the more freedom you have when animating the image. but, you can still follow this tutorial exactly and ignore the fill parts. if you need a shortcut because you're using an older version of PS that doesn't have the generative fill feature, you can marquee around your cut area, copy that selection and then paste it in place. manipulate the scaling so that the copied layer fills in the edges of your cut area slightly. as long as you do not animate the object drastically in After Effects, you will not really notice that much, especially if you smudge the layer slightly or add blurring with a feather of just a couple pixels. that is a method used in older versions of Adobe products to cut back on the manual labor generative fill solved in newer versions. another trick to hide empty space from After Effects alone is just using motion blurs and glows or shadows on the objects you put in motion. again, as long as you do not move it drastically, it will be almost unnoticeable. but that method is not advisable if the image has a lot of contrasting colors. doing so may require more knowledge and manipulation of lighting in your project to make it look natural. alternatively, you can scale up your animated objects slightly to conceal the empty space when the object moves. that is another trick that works under certain conditions; particularly if the image is not overly saturated with proportionally dependent objects such as people vs cars etc.
The way this guy explains everything is spot on . Thankyou mate
No problem!
Such a calming voice
You are so Pro.. Great tutorial.. Thanks
Reminds me of the holograms back in the day. Nice work.
You explain things so simply. I watched like 20 videos on this and you are the only one that makes this make sense thank you so much!
I like the way how you explain the things that are going on in the tutorial. Thank you for this.
Excellent video, thanks for the help!
Awesome video man. I've been trying to find a simple way to apply this effect to a lot of photos and this is the best process I've seen. Well done. Effective and efficient.
Excelente tutorial, Noyse! Me recuerda mucho a los endings de Mortal Kombat. 👌
Super cool. Good tutorial
Brilliant work. I used to love doing this sort of thing in AI years ago. Going to fire up AI and have a little play
Thank you soo much for sharing! Learned a lot from this video!
nice work:)
Thank you.
very easy and simple!
hey! thx for video! could u make same video but without generative fill ? ist it possible ?)
generative fill is just an automated predictive clone feature. it is very possible to create the effect without generative fill, but manually cloning or smudging is still advised around the edges of any cut area. if you choose not to - all that means is that you will not be able to animate objects as much because, when you put the objects in motion, it will expose empty space you left. the more you clone or fill, the more freedom you have when animating the image. but, you can still follow this tutorial exactly and ignore the fill parts. if you need a shortcut because you're using an older version of PS that doesn't have the generative fill feature, you can marquee around your cut area, copy that selection and then paste it in place. manipulate the scaling so that the copied layer fills in the edges of your cut area slightly. as long as you do not animate the object drastically in After Effects, you will not really notice that much, especially if you smudge the layer slightly or add blurring with a feather of just a couple pixels. that is a method used in older versions of Adobe products to cut back on the manual labor generative fill solved in newer versions. another trick to hide empty space from After Effects alone is just using motion blurs and glows or shadows on the objects you put in motion. again, as long as you do not move it drastically, it will be almost unnoticeable. but that method is not advisable if the image has a lot of contrasting colors. doing so may require more knowledge and manipulation of lighting in your project to make it look natural. alternatively, you can scale up your animated objects slightly to conceal the empty space when the object moves. that is another trick that works under certain conditions; particularly if the image is not overly saturated with proportionally dependent objects such as people vs cars etc.
excellent
awesome
Thanks bro
❤🔥❤🔥❤🔥❤🔥❤🔥❤🔥
ty bro
Liked 9:00 & subscribed to you 👍
it's very painfull to shredding all parts of image. haha. hope sometimes AI can do it.
It already can
The 3D cube doesn’t show up in my workspace ! Where TF is it !
Did you try the Toggle Switches / Mode on the bottom?
tell me your photoshop version
Photoshop 2024 25.11
Mic name please
Audio-Technica ATR2100
The mic is too good lol i can hear everytime he opens his mouth 😬 great tutorial though 💯
That’s kinda annoying