The Stylize FilterThe Stylize filter family offers some wonderful effects. They are creative, and you can use them to add final effects or touches to an image. This section touches on the most interesting of the filters, including the Find Edges filter, the Glowing Edges filter, and the Wind filter. Find Edges, Glowing Edges, and Trace ContourThese three effects sound as if they should look alike. They actually do look somewhat alike, with Glowing Edges and Find Edges being much more dramatic than Trace Contour. The Find Edges filter removes most of the colors from the object and replaces them with lines around every edge contour. The color of the lines depends on the value at that point on the original object, with lightest points in yellow, scaling through to the darkest points, which appear in purple. The picture looks like a rather delicate-colored pencil drawing of itself. Find Edges works best, naturally, on photos that have a lot of detail for the filter to find. In Figure 16.17, I've applied it to a digital photo of a hot dog cart. Find Edges sometimes becomes more interesting if you apply it more than once to the same picture. If you apply it once and don't like the result, try it again before you move on to a different filter, or increase the contrast in the original photo before you try again. Touching up areas afterward with the Sponge tool can bring out colors you hardly knew were there. Figure 16.17. Notice how Find Edges picks up the detail of the sidewalk and the soda can collection.![]() Figure 16.18. Some of the color remains, but the background goes black.![]() Figure 16.19. The image was traced several times with different settings.![]() The Wind FilterThe Wind filter creates a neat directional blur that looks, strangely enough, like wind. You can control the direction and the amount of wind in the dialog box (see Figure 16.20). This is a great filter for creating the illusion of movement and for applying to type. It works best when applied to a selected area rather than to the entire picture. Figure 16.20. The Wind filter and its dialog box.![]() The Emboss FilterHonestly, the Emboss filter doesn't do much for most photos. It turns an image into a bas-relief, although not as well as the Bas Relief filter does. In the process, the Emboss filter converts the image to medium gray. Photoshop also has a layer effect called Emboss, which seems to be a lot more flexible, but it is also more complicated to use. The Emboss filter has only three options: Shadow Angle, Height, and Amount. Figure 16.21 shows a piece of embossed type, first embossed with the filter and then with the layer effect. Figure 16.21. On top, the Emboss filter; below, the Emboss layer effect.![]() Figure 16.22. On the left, the lion seems to come forward. On the right, he recedes.![]() |