Adobe Photoshop Text Effects: Create A Worn And Torn Text Effect In Photoshop

Photoshop Text Effects: Worn And Torn Text

Learn Photoshop with Free Photoshop Text Effects at Photoshop Essentials.com

Written By Steve Patterson

In this Photoshop text effects tutorial, we're going to learn how to create a "worn and torn" effect with our text.

Here's the effect we're going for:

Adobe Photoshop Text Effects: The final effect

Let's get started.

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Step 1: Open A New Photoshop Document

I'm going to start by going up to the File Menu at the top of screen and choosing New... to create a new Photoshop document. I'll choose a preset size of 640x480, and then I'll click OK to have Photoshop create my new document for me:

Adobe Photoshop Text Effects: Creating a new document in Photoshop

Adobe Photoshop Text Effects: Create a new Photoshop document using the preset size of 640x480. You can use whichever size you like.

Step 2: Fill The Background Layer With Black

Press D on your keyboard to quickly set black as your foreground color. Then use the keyboard shortcut Alt+Backspace (Win) / Option+Delete (Mac) to fill the Background layer with black:

Adobe Photoshop Text Effects: Fill the Background layer with black

Adobe Photoshop Text Effects: Press "Alt+Backspace" (Win) / "Option+Delete" (Mac) to fill the background with black.

Step 3: Set Your Foreground Color To White And Add Your Text

Press X on your keyboard this time to swap your Foreground and Background colors, so white becomes your Foreground color. Then grab your Type tool from the Tools palette or by pressing T on your keyboard:

Adobe Photoshop Text Effects: Selecting the Type tool from the Tools palette.

Adobe Photoshop Text Effects: Select the Type tool from the Tools palette or by pressing "T" on your keyboard.

Then with the Type tool selected, choose your font up in the Options Bar at the top of the screen and add your text. I'm going to use "Impact" for my font, and I'll type the word "FEAR". Then I'll press Ctrl+T (Win) / Command+T (Mac) to bring up Photoshop's Free Transform box and handles around my text and while holding down Shift+Alt (Win) / Shift+Option (Mac), I'll drag out a corner handle to resize my text and make it larger. Holding Shift constrains the proportions of the text as I drag, and holding Alt/Option forces the text to resize from the center. Here's my text after resizing it:

Adobe Photoshop Text Effects: Typing the word 'FEAR' into the Photoshop Document.

Adobe Photoshop Text Effects: Add your text, then resize it if needed with the Free Transform command.

Step 4: Rasterize The Text

We need to convert the text into pixels at this point, so once you're happy with your text, go up to the Layer menu at the top of the screen, choose Rasterize, and then choose Type. Your text won't look any different in the Document Window, but if you look at your Type layer in the Layers palette, you'll see that it has now become a normal layer:

Adobe Photoshop Text Effects: Photoshop's Layers palette now showing the text as a normal layer after rasterizing it.

Adobe Photoshop Text Effects: After rasterizing the text, it becomes a normal layer in the Layers palette.

Want a better way to learn? Download this tutorial as an easy to read, ready to print PDF eBook!

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