Create a Slick Black iMac in Photoshop
In Effects by CollisStep 1
The first thing we need to make our black iMac is a regular one to base it off. I used the previous model because when I originally did this, that was all that was available. Here's an image I found off Google Images of a front facing iMac. It's a pretty standard product shot.

Step 2
Now the first thing to do is create a new layer on top, grab the Rounded Rectangle Tool (U) and draw a black rectangle with a curve matching the base image. (I believe I used a 20px Radius)

Step 3
Now for the moment we'll leave the screen and focus on the stand. So zoom in and using the Pen Tool (P) draw around the stand like shown. With the pen tool it's a good idea to use as few points as possible as you will get a smoother line. This can take some practice and a few attempts. Also try to mirror where you place the points so that even if the line is a little wonky, at least it's symmetrical.

Step 4
Once you have the path, right click on it and choose Make Selection.

Step 5
Now before I go any further, I wanted to note that the black that Apple use is a sort of matt or dull black. In photos it has a slightly blue-ish cast. Rather than trying to guess what exact colours to use, I just found a picture of a regular black Mac laptop and then using the eye dropper picked out a few shades (shown below).

Step 6
Anyhow so back to the stand, with the selection still made, I created a new layer and then used the Reflected Gradient and a dark and light black from the previous step and filled in the stand as shown. You can see that the light part of the gradient is in the middle. I did this because when you look at the stand in the white version it has the same sort of light and shade but inversed.
Actually in almost all the steps in this tutorial, the idea is to look at how the photo looks and then emulate the effect using dark greys and blacks instead of whites and light greys.

Step 7
Now the gradient wasn't that strong, so I grabbed a large fat Dodge Tool (O) brush, then while holding SHIFT down to keep my brush exactly horizontal I went over a couple of times to get that highlight looking stronger.

Step 8
After dodging the curve, I then used the Dodge tool on the very bottom of the stand so that it gets lighter there too (as shown below). It's already starting to look like a stand now, amazing what a bit of light and shadow can do!

Step 9
Next I again got the Pen Tool out and this time drew a shape that captured the area at the very front of the stand (see below). This part should have a different colouring so that when you look at the image it you can see that this part is at a different angle to the other part of the stand.
Note that the base of my pen selection in the image below shown is all wonky, that's because it doesn't really matter about that part, I just want to get that curve at the top.
Next we right click with the Pen tool still selected and choose Make Selection again. Then create a new layer above the stand layer and fill it with a dark grey.

Step 10
So as you can see in the image below I have my weird shape just on top of the main stand. So now we CTRL-click the stand layer to select its pixels and then press CTRL-SHIFT-I to invert the selection. Then hit Delete so that all you are left with from our weird shape is the intersection of the two shapes.

Step 11
Now grab the Dodge Tool (O) and again with a soft brush add a highlight where shown, then hold down ALT and brush the right most edge. Holding down ALT with the Dodge tool changes it to the Burn tool (and vice versa). So you can quickly brush dark and light without changing tools.

Step 12
Finally to complete the stand, we duplicate the front part of the stand, hold down CTRL and click that layer then press the down arrow once and hit Delete. This should leave you with a 1px thin line (shown in selection in the image below). Set this layer to Overlay and 30% and it'll give a really faint highlight.
Do the same thing again, except this time instead of the down arrow, press the Up arrow so that you are left with a 1px selection at the base. Place this layer below the stand, move it down 1px and use the Burn tool to darken it up. This will be a faint shadow beneath the stand.
(Note this step isn't essential and sounds complicated, but is actually quite simple. If you do get lost in there, don't worry it won't drastically affect the final image)

Step 13
OK so we have a pretty cool black stand. Here it is on top of the main image and you can see that it looks about right!

Step 14
Now we start work on the screen area. The first thing we need to do is get rid of the straight black shape and replace it with a gradient. So we switch that layer's visibility off and then holding down CTRL, click on it, create a new layer and then draw a Reflected Gradient from the top-left corner to the bottom-right corner so that it's light in the middle and dark on the corners, as shown.

Step 15
Next I grabbed a large fat Dodge brush and lightened diagonally across a little more as shown.

Step 16
Now once again CTRL-click the screen layer to select its pixels, then go to Select > Modify > Contract and use a value of 1px. Then in a new layer fill it with a lighter shade of dark grey as shown.
Without letting go of the selection, again go to Select > Modify > Contract and this time use a value of 2px. When you're done, hit Delete and you should be left with a thin 2px line that goes around the screen.
This thin line will let us give a bit of highlighting and shadow to the screen edges. I did this because if you look carefully at the white iMac you'll see a similar thin line around the screen, particularly in the top right where it's quite highlighted.

Step 17
Now grab your large Dodge brush and strategically lighten the top-right corner and a little on the right hand side and the top. Experiment with where it seems appropriate to highlight.

Step 18
Now switch off the black screen layers for a moment, so you can see the white screen behind. Then, in a new layer, using the Rounded Rectangle Tool with a very slight curve this time (I used 2px) to draw a rectangle where the display area is, as shown.

Step 19
Now you can switch the rest of the screen layers back on. Now CTRL-click the display layer we just created, then create a new layer on top, go to Selection > Modify > Contract and use a value of 2px. Fill this new area with straight black.
As you can see what happens is the first display layer we created is actually a highlight around the main display area. If you look at your screen, chances are you'll be able to see a bit of this. If you wanted to make this really realistic you could use a bit of Dodge and Burn to darken and lighten it appropriately. But for our purposes this will do!

Step 20
Next I placed an image on the screen. I wanted a nice abstract Mac type background, and fortunately for us, we have a PSDTUTS tutorial on this. I basically just used the output of that tutorial, except modified the colouring to be green. You can use whatever you want. Just place the image and press CTRL-T to transform it down to the right size. You might need to crop the image to make it fit.

Step 21
Now iMacs always have those little cameras at the top, so next I made a circular selection around the camera in the white iMac photo and copied it over and placed it in the same position in a new layer above the other black iMac layers.

Step 22
Now we need a Dock! Once again I just went to Google and found a screenshot of someone's desktop, cut out the dock using the rectangular selection tool and pasted it on top. The only problem is the background is blue! So we need to adjust that to green before we finish placing it.

Step 23
So I used the Magic Wand Tool (W) and clicked in the blue area to select it all. Then hold down SHIFT and click in any areas that get missed, like inside the Quicktime symbol. Basically make sure you get all the pixels. It's not terribly important for it to be a really nice selection because we'll be shrinking this down ...thank goodness, because otherwise we'd have to use the pen tool!
Once you have the selection, go to Image > Adjustments > Hue/Saturation and move the Hue slider until it hits a light green colour that roughly matches the green background (or matches whatever background you used).

Step 24
Now we place that dock over the wallpaper and press CTRL-T to transform it down.
Next we need a little Mac logo to stick on the screen. Once again I found an image using a regular Google image search. This one is a nice silver colour which should work well.

Step 25
The problem however is that there is a shadow behind the logo which we don't want. So grab the pen tool and trace out the edges of the logo as shown. When you're done, right click and choose Make Selection then press CTRL-C to copy the logo out of it's shadow background.

Step 26
Now to place the logo, switch off all the black layers so you can see your white iMac guide image again, then shrink down the logo so it roughly matches the size and position of the logo on the machine. Then switch back the black layers again!

Step 27
Almost there now!
Next we create a subtle reflection to make it look like the iMac is really standing there. So duplicate the stand layer, press CTRL-T and rotate it 180'. Then fade the layer out to 20% and add an adjustment layer as shown so that it fades off into nothingness.

Step 28
Next we're going to add a really subtle shadow beneath the iMac as well. So draw an ellipse as shown in dark grey.

Step 29
Now fade the ellipse shadow out to about 20% opacity and go to Filter > Blur > Gaussian Blur and use a value of about 10px to get a good blur. When you've done that, hit CTRL-T to transform and squeeze the shadown vertically only (so that it's not so tall, but remains the same width). We do this so that the shadow looks like it's on the same plane as the table or whatever the iMac is on.

Step 30
And we're pretty much done! I moved the iMac off to the side and added a bit of text to finish it off. In case you're wondering the typeface is Myriad Pro Semibold which looks quite similar to the typeface that Apple use (though not quite the same, unless I'm mistaken).

Conclusion
So there you have it, we have created a new look for the iMac! In the Sample PSD for this tutorial I've included both the PSD for this tutorial and the original one that I created some months ago which is pretty similar but a lot larger and with some minor variations. Hope you enjoyed the tutorial!
Comments
Leave a CommentAdd a Comment

























ASJ
December 7th, 2007
That is fantastic!
michael brito
December 7th, 2007
looks pretty cool. what i would like to see is a silver imac like to old powerbooks, that’d be champion.
Brian Purkiss
December 7th, 2007
That is so cool….
aj
December 7th, 2007
cool, never thought of that;p love the color black:)
Arik
December 7th, 2007
Very nice tutorial, reminds of some of the ‘olskoo’ tutorials that were around a few years ago. You don’t see this all that often anymore.
drx
December 7th, 2007
wow! looks so real
Joefrey Mahusay
December 7th, 2007
Wow! Cool tutorial, I love it!
Gino
December 7th, 2007
Amazing as always. I love how its do detailed even down to the little tiny web cam. This tutorial could work as a guide to recolor any product!
Joe
December 7th, 2007
I can definitely see using this technique one day! Good stuff.
Andrew
December 7th, 2007
I want one!
Diego
December 7th, 2007
This looks suspiciously Vista-like! I bet the Microsoft guys went through a similar process to “create” the Vista look.
I Haagen I
December 7th, 2007
Nicely done =] This technique can be used to make many gadgets
pat
December 7th, 2007
Apple has a variation of Myrid Pro. slightly different Kerning pairs and weight. Hard core Type-Nerd and Apple fanboys would be hard pressed to tell the difference at screen resolution.
pat
December 7th, 2007
Myriad pro…. rather.. .
James
December 7th, 2007
You’re missing the menu bar at the top of the screen.
Zach
December 7th, 2007
Awesome tutorial as usual. Maybe Apple should contact you about designing their promos. Awesome graphic. I’d love a custom colored laptop.
Hamish M
December 7th, 2007
Great Job, Collis! There are some great techniques in this tutorial — and the end result is great!
Mykii
December 7th, 2007
Hahaha, thats awesome, I googled it and yup… a BUNCH of your picture comes up!!
James F
December 7th, 2007
You are my God! Amazing tut, good job!
Eric
December 7th, 2007
Good good good… of course.
pax
December 7th, 2007
Everything looks nice, except the iSight Camera. That one looks weak, but the rest is nice!
Hooper
December 7th, 2007
Professional!
Great job!
Great web site!
I check it out everyday!
Thanx!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Brian
December 7th, 2007
Quite possibly the best tutorial I have seen - I love macs. I am going to go try and do this right now, absolutely beautiful and stunning.
Constantin Potorac
December 7th, 2007
All the apple fans form out there say:
Thank you Collis for the tut
Also I can’t wait for my new iMac to arrive.
AkzFire
December 7th, 2007
That is just amazing! Its great how you can just look at something and create an exact duplicate with your own modifications. Wow, simply wow! I’m gonna have to try this this weekend. ^_^
bintek
December 7th, 2007
great tut Collis!
Mark Abucayon
December 7th, 2007
I like this tuts, very useful… cool- Collis rocks thanks
hkysj
December 7th, 2007
so cool
PooM
December 7th, 2007
Awesome tut man! Actually looks like a real Apple advert too!
Zenor
December 7th, 2007
Awesome (:
oreo
December 7th, 2007
great tutorial!
btw the exact font that Apple use is
Myriad Apple, which is a slight twitch based on Myriad Pro
in case you didn’t know.
reezluv
December 7th, 2007
wow..what a nice tutorial..awesome
Mr_LeE
December 7th, 2007
Collis you are a genius. Wish i worked for you.
Christoph
December 8th, 2007
mac - come over to the dark site.
Dannie
December 8th, 2007
Very good tutorial; however you’re missing some texture to the black surface. It looks like a photoshop gradient too much. Still top tutorial
thanks.
g0bez
December 8th, 2007
Total fake — PHOTOSHOPPED!!!
heh… nice work!
Mr.doob
December 8th, 2007
The reflection is wrong. Apart front that… nice
Frank
December 8th, 2007
Myriad Pro is, in fact, the font Apple uses. You’re right!
Thiru
December 8th, 2007
Very useful tutorial
Thomas
December 8th, 2007
Hm…it’s a nice tutorial, but the resulting image just isn’t convincing. Nice attempt though, as I couldn’t do any better.
P.S. How can I prevent the pen tool from simulating the resulting shape with every added point? This is really getting in the way because it often blocks out the image I’m tracing with the selected fill color.
Νestoras
December 8th, 2007
thanks for this great tut. absolutely fantastic. Going to try soon
sasha
December 8th, 2007
Great ,but this can be done with different approach in photoshop i mean faster….You can use for apple screen rounded rectangle tool and work with softh brush for black effect,also for logo you can use font on dafont.com for mac logo and do some paint with gradients,screen stand can be finish usign pen tool ;)..this is great tutorial but i guess hard for non-advanced users in photoshop…
Dennis Plucinik
December 8th, 2007
Great tutorial. This really is a simple task for any experienced user but again - your tutorial looks great, reads well and strikes a nerve with a fanatic audience. You ought to consider writing an article on how to write a Photoshop tutorial because there are plenty of people who could use some guidance with that.
Also I want to mention how nice it is to see proper Photoshop techniques being used. I’ll look forward to my getting next fix. Thanks again!
Dennis Plucinik
December 8th, 2007
… I know it’s a couple months late but congrats on the 11k lol.
Sebastian
December 9th, 2007
nice…
Mark Abucayon
December 10th, 2007
very impressive tut.. Thanks again..
kira
December 10th, 2007
That’s very nice. Creative. Thanks for the tutorial. =)
rakzo27
December 11th, 2007
Nice Tut, but… where is the HD icon? x xD
Mr K
December 11th, 2007
Of course you could have simply used “inverse” in photoshop to turn the mac black and then put the image in the screen etc.
Still a great tut
Keep em coming
Jonker
December 11th, 2007
Step 27: looks more like a layer mask then a adjustment layer to me.
But a great tut anyway! Very well explained and displayed.
faisal khan
December 11th, 2007
its Good & Cool
Tymo
December 11th, 2007
Extra points for the gratuitous rock reference!
Ahmadِ
December 15th, 2007
Very gooOood
Thank you
krazy3
December 16th, 2007
This is really nice. Apple should start making these
I’m a windows fan, but I’d buy one 
luke de duke
December 20th, 2007
very nice! but you forgot the menubar
RAFi
December 21st, 2007
Very nice.
PhilFreelance-Web
December 24th, 2007
A very nice tutorial… Nice one… hope you can contribute more on web 2.0 layouts
chibone
January 5th, 2008
That will be cool to actually have a black iMac
mohd
January 7th, 2008
that’s very nice tutorial thans so much
Keast
January 7th, 2008
Nice! The only thing bad about it is that we can see your email adress (step 5 ;).
Talkingtofu2
January 10th, 2008
I luv it!!!
I Need One Of Those Macs Too
Jeba
January 14th, 2008
Hi,
You could have easily achieved this effect by using Hue/Saturation
Nice tutorial
andy stewart
January 14th, 2008
www.andystewart-design.com
shahram
January 20th, 2008
great job but i do not like mac !!!!
Steake
January 20th, 2008
Good , but could be achieved more painlessly
bratwurst
January 29th, 2008
u rule
Richard
February 5th, 2008
Great job there mate, must have taken you a while that!
TREZ
February 9th, 2008
YEAH, GREAT JOB, REALLY
web design cheltenham
February 29th, 2008
good tutorial does anyone know where to purchase myrid apple font ? had a wuick hunt and could’nt find it. good turial real impressive
Adam
March 16th, 2008
@cheltenham: Myriad Apple is basically a custom modification of Myriad Pro that was developed specifically for and is proprietary to Apple, Inc. No one outside their marketing/advertising team has access to it. Myriad Pro, which comes bundled with most editions of Creative Suite, is the closest font available to the public. (I’m fairly confident Adobe also retails it separately, but chances are good that if you have Photoshop, you have the font installed already). I defy anyone but the most hardcore of typophiles to detect the difference between the two.
Melin
March 27th, 2008
I love this!
baby_gurl17
May 1st, 2008
WOW nice job! We do a project like this everyweek. I got to a vocational school and in my lab it is our job to design and sell our products to consumers. I just love looking at tuts and seeing what I can do. Photoshop of course is a huge help and at our school we have CS2 so it is nice. Our computers are top of the line too. We only have three macs though. One is kind of old. The other two are 2007 macs. Well anyway great tut. I learned a lot and to put it simply you did a wonderful job on copying the mac. We havent’ done anything this advanced though . The first week of school we had to copy out dell mouses and most people forgot that the E in the dell logo is turned and connects the D and L together. other than that everybody did a good job! Keep those tutorials coming!
Al'Deny
May 4th, 2008
nice job =) awesome ^^