Creating a Vinyl Record In Photoshop
In Effects by ArikIn this tutorial, I will explain how to make a vinyl graphic. This tutorial will outline techniques to avoid choppy edges and create proper texturing and lighting.
Step 1.
Let's start out by creating a new file. I used a 300x300 pixel canvas set at 72dpi (regular settings), and I filled my background with a soft gradient. You can fill it with whatever you want.
Create a layer set and call it "vinyl." Create a new layer within the layer set, also called "vinyl," and fill it with a dark grey (almost black) color like #111111. Fill this layer with noise by going to Filter > Noise > Add noise and use the settings shown below in the screenshot.

Step 2
The noise we just added will be used to create the circular texture that is typical for a vinyl record. Go to Filter > Blur > Radial blur, and use the settings shown below. After this, duplicate the layer and set the "vinyl copy" layer to Overlay. To bring out the texture a little more, I went ahead and navigated to Image > Adjustments > Brightness/Contrast and applied the settings seen below to the "vinyl copy" layer.

Step 3
Time to cut out our circular shape. I will be using the Ellipse Tool (U) for this job. Now I've set my Ellipse Tool to Shape Layers instead of Paths because this way I can easily center my shape once I draw it out. Place your crosshairs (cursor) more or less in the middle and while holding down Shift+Alt, draw a circle. Holding down Shift+Alt ensures that you make a perfect circle and that it is created from the middle outwards.
Switch to the Move tool (V) and hit Ctrl+A so that you select the entire canvas. Using the alignment controls at the top, press Align Vertical Centers and Align Horizontal Centers. This moves the circular shape to the center of the canvas.

Step 4
Next we will cut out our actual shape. Ctrl-click on the Shape 1 layer and hide it by clicking on the eye icon next to it. Now select the "vinyl" layer set and hit the Mask button. This masks out the selection.
Duplicate the "Shape 1" layer and resize it to about 5% (hit Ctrl+T, and then enter 5% in the size boxes). Ctrl-click the new "Shape 1 copy" layer, and with a black brush, paint the selection black in the mask we made for our "vinyl" layer set. This will create a hole in the middle, which is typical for a vinyl. When I did this, I noticed that I had to nudge my "Shape 1 copy" layer a bit to the left and up so that it looked right.

Step 5
Now that we have our basic shape and texture done, it's time to bring this baby to life. First we need to add some shine. We're going to do this in two steps. In this step, we will apply subtle contrast lighting across the object and in Step 2, we are going to make it pop. Create a new layer above the (hidden) "Shape 1 copy" layer and name it "contrast." Reset your colors to black and white by hitting D on your keyboard, and go to Filter > Render > Clouds. Next go to Filter > Render > Difference Clouds and hit Ctrl+F a few times (this re-applies the filter). Go to Filter > Blur > Radial Blur and use the settings shown below in the screenshot.

Then set the layer to Soft Light and experiment with Brightness/Contrast. In my case I moved the Contrast down to around -20 and raised the Brightness to about +50. I also used a Mask and a 50% black brush to remove the black areas. I just want to keep the highlights. Eventually I decided to lower the Opacity of the layer to 75%, and then I was satisfied. Play around and see what looks right to you.

Step 6
Now it's time to make it really pop. Create a gradient as shown below:

Create a new layer and name it "highlights." Drag the gradient out in the middle as shown in 1 (below), then go to Edit > Transform > Perspective and select the top-left corner, hold Shift and drag down. Drag until the handles overlap as in 2 (below) and then hit Enter. Hit Ctrl+T and stretch the gradient out a bit vertically. Set this layer to Soft Light, duplicate it twice, and spin the top layer around a bit until you get something similar to 3 (below).

Highlights can come in a variety of shapes and sizes, it just depends on the light source and its direction. Personally, I like to vary the type of highlights I use depending on the project.
Step 7
For this vinyl I created a sticker for the center. I made a circle with the Ellipse Tool, then added some text and a random graphic I brushed on. You can do whatever you like with the sticker design. I also added another layer of extra bright highlights and a Color Balance layer on top to fine tune my coloring. All of this is optional depending on the project or aesthetic you're looking for. Finally, I added a layer that looked like clear plastic over the sticker, as real vinyls have. I did this by creating a circle below the sticker and highlights layers and filling it with a dark grey color.

Conclusion
So there you go, a nice little graphic that can be used in a variety of ways. What I like most about this technique is that even though not all of the layers are vector layers, you can still resize the image without loss of quality. Apart from the layers which are used for the sticker (which could be vector too), the rest is either text (which is stretchable) or masked layers, and masks are also stretchable. In fact, we have a safety here. If you stretch out the mask and it becomes blurry, then just unhide your shape layer, stretch that out and mask again. Even though you can scale this, keep in mind that if you try to scale it up dramatically you will lose the fine texture lines on the vinyl.
Thank you for viewing this tutorial, and make sure you have fun while making yours!
Comments
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Johnson
November 30th, 2007
Nice work Arik, a nice sold little tutorial!
Colin
November 30th, 2007
ooo first comment! i better say something meaningful….
….well i don’t have anything meaningful to say….but i do like it! simple and i’m sure i can get it better than that fire ball (which i still haven’t got the hang of yet)
Collis
November 30th, 2007
Well done Arik, a great addition to the PSDTUTS library. This site is starting to get some depth which is pretty cool!
Jon
November 30th, 2007
Fantastic work! I think this would look great combined with Fabio’s vanishing point treatment. Thanks for the tut!
Parrappa
November 30th, 2007
Great tutorial!
Collis
November 30th, 2007
Have you guys seen this image from photoshop zen master Lance Thackeray - Lumi Deck … This tutorial made me think of it!
Actually Lance is going to be writing some tutorials for PSDTUTS soon which is pretty damn cool!
Eli
November 30th, 2007
Beautiful outcome for this tutorial
SasaVtec
November 30th, 2007
Nice tutorial, thanks for writing.
Brian
November 30th, 2007
Wow! Great tutorial.
Jonathan Solichin
November 30th, 2007
Nice! Never thought of this before. Although it was hard to see the “recording lines” in the beginning, it came out pretty clear at the end. pretty amazing transformation there. Solid!
Jonathan Solichin
November 30th, 2007
Sorry for the double post, maybe an admin can combine it for me? I forgot to say, I’ve never knew that there was a vertical and a horizontal align tool! Thanks.
GeminiArt
November 30th, 2007
nice tuts
simple but cool
Credit Immobilier
November 30th, 2007
Very nice !
Thank you for the tutorial !
James
November 30th, 2007
Wow, that’s pretty clever. I never thought of using the perspective transform like that…
helen
November 30th, 2007
nice & simple….thanks a lot
Johan
November 30th, 2007
Great tut!
Thx
giackop
November 30th, 2007
YES!!! really nice tut!!
Chuck
November 30th, 2007
Nice tutorial and great result!
As I don’t currently have Photoshop installed, how would it look if skewed to give perspective? IE. To make it look like it was laid on a table top.
Ronan Murphy
November 30th, 2007
Very very cool, (borat voice) I LIKE!
Markus
November 30th, 2007
Aweasome, great tutorial! I cant wait to try it :D!
Dustin Brewer
November 30th, 2007
Great tutorial, not sure that I can use it in practice but it does give me some ideas for using other methods for some different design stuff.
Joefrey Mahusay
December 1st, 2007
Nice Tutorial…Great job arik! two thumbs up!
Ignacio
December 1st, 2007
I just like the techniques from this tutorial.
Fabio "zee"
December 1st, 2007
I really like it… thanks for sharing
Mark Abucayon
December 1st, 2007
This is awesome- You really did a Good Job Dude, In fact I follow it how to do it. wow this is cool thats why I keep coming back in this website it really shares plenty ideas. nice
salman
December 1st, 2007
awesome…u won’t beleive i racked my brains few weeks back 2 try myself for a vinyl record….and had to chop it from the screenshot of virtual dj! but now i can say that everything is ‘HAND MADE’! Cheers…keep the tuts cumin’!
Don
December 1st, 2007
Nice and Simple.
Arik
December 1st, 2007
Thanks for the comments guys. I really hope that Lance makes a tutorial on how he does those flames as seen in ‘passionflame’.
Timothy Diokno
December 2nd, 2007
It looks so realistic that it can be an iStock material. You can trick people in to thinking that it’s an actual photograph of a vinyl record.
Stom365
December 2nd, 2007
It’s amazing !!!
thanks a lot
Matt Mills
December 2nd, 2007
Nice mate, good job, loving the tuts, again, this site is getting a broad range of tuts going, which is great. well well done again.
Deniece
December 2nd, 2007
Cool tutorial, dude! Thanks to you, I learnt things I didn’t know existed!
Matty
December 3rd, 2007
Wow it’s a cool thing but you lost me after step 4. It was WAY too confusing but it’s a cool effect.
b00m
December 3rd, 2007
good. No more say…
Constantin Potorac
December 4th, 2007
I am really looking forward to see some tuts from Lumi Deck. I took a look at his work and I have to admit hes work is amazing.
jessica
December 4th, 2007
how do you do step 4- with all the mask layers. i cant get the layer set to have the correct mask on it
thanks
Gabe
December 5th, 2007
great tutorial, but i have one question.
are you supposed to rasterize the shape 1 copy-layer[step4]? because i cant paint in it if i dont
escanive
December 5th, 2007
Thanks for this great tutorial. It’s very good.
Sheryl
December 6th, 2007
I’m having the same problem, Jessica. The tutorial says: Next we will cut out our actual shape. CTRL+CLICK on the ‘Shape 1′ layer and hide it by clicking on the eye icon next to it. Now select the ‘vinyl’ layer set and hit the mask button. This masks out the selection.
I assume I should first hit Ctrl-D to deselect all. (This was selected when we aligned the circle.) Or is that what CTRL+CLICK does? CTRL+CLICK appears just to deselect the Shape 1 layer. Then I hide that layer. Then I go up to the layer above it - the “group” layer, the one with the folder icon, and click on the Add Layer Mask icon at the bottom of the the Layers palette, yes? The result does not cut out the circle. The mask thumbnail on the “group” layer does not show a white circle with a black background as is shown in the tutorial. It shows an all white square, as if I’ve masked the entire thing.
I did get the album look by following up through Step 3. Then I merged the vinyl and vinyl dupe layers, put an eliptical marquee over the resulting layer, clicked on Select>Inverse, then clicked on Delete and was able to cut out the “record.” I then just created a similar but very small circle in the center, again with the eliptical marquee tool, and hit delete. But I’m sure there was some advantage to masking. Can anyone set me straight on this? TIA
Sheryl
December 6th, 2007
Oops, that’s not quite what I did. I did not create the vinyl group layer at all. I just created a regular layer above the background layer and did the noise and distort things described in the tut. Then I duplicated that layer and clicked on Overlay and did the contrast thing. Then I merged the two layers. I stayed in that merged layer and cut out the “record.” After that I continued to Step 5 in the tut. Again, I’m sure there’s an advantage to creating the group layer and doing the masking, but I was unable to get the “record” cut out, as far as I could tell. Like Jessica, I’d sure like to know what I did wrong! Thanks!
Arik
December 7th, 2007
I think this might be an issue regarding different version of photoshop. I am using CS3. Before you actually create the mask that is applied to the layer set, you need to have a circular selection. Otherwise it will just create a white mask and it won’t mask out anything.
The advantage is that you do not have to merge, which is better for your workflow (imo)
Fab
December 11th, 2007
Hey, how do I actually cut out the Vinyl cuz I have marked the ellipse and continued with the tutorial but in the end i ended with a square
and how do i create the gradient as shown here?
thx
ty for the tutorial
fab
ElTioFabi
December 20th, 2007
Woooww. This tutorial is going to be very helpful for a website that I’m developing. Thanks a lot for the tut.
filip
December 26th, 2007
Really great tutorial. Easy to understand even for me. Great work. Thanks.
andy stewart
January 14th, 2008
http://www.andystewart-design.com
Tom
April 16th, 2008
Great tutorial!
Works very nicely, thanks a lot for taking the time to publish it!
Cheers,
Tom : )
rinc
May 8th, 2008
good job
Max
June 27th, 2008
Is it playable? ^^
Thanks for the tut
zalupar
June 30th, 2008
WOW! Great vinyl! real vinyl! since 1955!!!