• I want to thank all the members that have upgraded your accounts. I truly appreciate your support of the site monetarily. Supporting the site keeps this site up and running as a lot of work daily goes on behind the scenes. Click to Support Signs101 ...

Making designer like patterns, Any good tutorials?

J

john1

Guest
Hey, I have a customer wanting one of those custom designer type patterns on his hood (wrap) and am looking for a good way to make a seamless pattern.

It's kinda like the gucci or louis vuitton patterns where there's a symbol repeating all over.

I searched google but couldn't really make heads or tails for some reason. Looking to do it in photoshop preferably.

Thanks!
 

Custom_Grafx

New Member
Do you already have the pattern? or you need to create it? or you need a library to choose from?

I recently purchased Plotter Art Textures from Fred (site admin) and they are top quality and a good price too.

Are you using Corel or Photoshop?
 

grafixemporium

New Member
It's pretty easy actually. After you make whatever symbols you want to use for the pattern, you need to decide how large they need to be on the hood and how you want them spaced. In my attached example, I am showing how to create pattern of 1 inch X's and O's that repeat every 10 inches. Open a new file that is 10 inches x 10 inches at 100dpi. Move your guides to divide the space in half vertically and horizontally. Then use your guides to divide each quarter in half again. Note, your pattern source file should have a transparent background. I left a white background so you could see the guides better. Centering your graphics using the guides will ensure your pattern is perfectly spaced. You can use the same graphic or different graphics depending on the look you are going for. Center one graphic in the top left quadrant. Center another graphic in the lower right quadrant. The blank quadrants are what will give your final pattern that staggered look. Experiment with the size and spacing of your pattern source file. Once you get it laid out, in Photoshop choose Edit>Define Pattern. Now your Pattern source file is created.

Now it's time to create the layout for your vehicle hood panel. Make a new document scaled to the size of the hood you are going to wrap. In my example, for simplicity I made a 100 inch x 100 inch panel at 100dpi. On a new layer, choose Edit>Fill>Pattern and select the pattern you created. It will be the last pattern in the list of patterns that pops up. The result should look like my example below. Add colors, textures and whatever other effects you want... or just leave it clean and simple. Good luck.
 

Attachments

  • pattern1.jpg
    pattern1.jpg
    67.4 KB · Views: 83
  • pattern2.jpg
    pattern2.jpg
    48.7 KB · Views: 96

VinylLabs.com

New Member
if you want a pattern that does not look repeated (ie: a line or somethign along the edge) you can offset the pattern 50% in both directions, and add somethign in the center.

for example:

1) create a 100x100 image. add some elements but make sure NONE of them touch the edges.
2) offset the image by 50px up and 50px accross, you will now see the missing area in the center
3) fill this area with elements, but make sure you do NOT touch the edges.

4) define a pattern and fill a document with it.
 
Top