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Design a Vista Styled Wallpaper

In Effects by Václav Krejčí

Today we'll create a wallpaper in Vista style. A black background will be filled with stylish gradients decorated with blue and green abstract curved shapes. The techniques used in this tutorial are scalable. It's easy to turn the final design into different sizes to fit various monitors. Let's learn how to do it.

Editor's Note: This tutorial was originally published in the Czech language at Grafika Online. Grafika have kindly given permission for Vaclav to republish here on PSDTUTS for those of us who haven't quite mastered Czech...

Final Image Preview

Before we get started, let's take a look at the image we'll be creating. Click the screenshot below to view the full-size image. As always, the layered Photoshop file is available via our PSDTUTS Plus membership.

Final Click

Step 1

Start a new screen sized document in Photoshop. In this case, I chose 1024px by 768px resolution so I can see the whole thing without scrolling. Fill the background with black color. Then pick the Polygonal Lasso Tool, and choose a part of the document. Then use the Gradient Tool to draw a gradient from white to transparent into new layer. Repeat this several times (always into new layer).

Step 2

To make the background less expressive, turn the Opacity down.

Step 3

Merge the layers together (Ctrl + E). Then blur them with the Gaussian Blur filter. A small preview of whole document follows.

Step 4

To make it more expressive in some places continue drawing radial gradients from white to transparent.

Step 5

Turn its opacity to a hardly remarkable level.

Step 6

Well, there is never enough white to transparent gradients, right?

Step 7

Just don't forget to turn the opacity down wisely.

Step 8

You can make the background more interesting by copying all the layers and flipping them (Ctrl + T), or move them a little.

Step 9

256 shades of grey aren't enough for this gentle manipulation.

Step 10

That is why we should merge the layers together, and blur them again a little. That is what solves the rough gradients, but another problem arises - the picture darkens on the sides, and the dark parts make strange "waves."

Step 11

This can be fixed with a larger document than the screen resolution, or add a frame that is wide enough. And remember that for next time. That is how we solved random gradients on a background.

Step 12

Now we can start doing the foreground with blue and green curves. Start with drawing a huge ellipse with the Ellipse Tool. Pick the Path Selection Tool (A). Then select the ellipse, copy it (Ctrl+C), then insert it (Ctrl+V), and then transform it (Ctrl + T) to make it smaller. Set the drawing style for this path to subtract, so we see only what is between these two ellipses.

Step 13

Fill the layer with a blue color (#62AAF4). Then copy, move, enlarge, make it smaller, and turn the Opacity down or up. Do this a few times.

Step 14

Then repeat these actions with the green (#20EDC4) shapes.

Step 15

Next I decided to darken the gradients in the background a little, as they get too much attention. This should be better.

Step 16

Continue with creating larger curved shapes. Then blur those shapes, which will give that extra glow effect. Notice the big blue curves being created in the image below.

Step 17

Next we'll make big curve shapes for the greens as well. Those big shapes are the previous ellipses copied. Then with Path Selection Tool, we select one smaller ellipse that gets smaller again. See the image below.

Step 18

The colors of those shapes are still the same, just the Opacity is turned down. Sometimes, the opacity is turned down to a hardly noticeable level of (5-10%), as shown below.

Step 19

Place all the blue and green layers into a new folder. Then copy that folder, move it sideways, and turn it a little.

Step 20

Let's get started with the lighting part. The first step is to change the layer's interaction to Linear Dodge .

Step 21

The second step is to add the layer effect of Drop Shadow. Set it to a large size with the color the same as the shape in the layer (blue, green). Also, set the interaction to Linear Dodge again.

Step 22

I don't have enough green layers in the document, so I copy some more.

Step 23

Copy the layer styles to every blue layer (just change the effect color to blue). Part of the design is shown in the following image, which is the result we want so far.

Step 24

To achieve the bright glowing light look, we need to repeat the same things over and over again. You can use the previous big layers, merge them together, and set their interaction to Linear Dodge. Then you can add a mask layer. Then go to Filter > Render > Clouds in this mask. That makes the layer visible in only some places.

Step 25

If you make all layers visible, the result becomes more expressive.

Step 26

We can do the effect manually as well. For example, create a new Adjustment layer with the Brightness & Contrast turned up. Fill the layer mask with a black color, which makes the effect visible nowhere. Then start drawing in the mask with a white soft brush. The brush revels the effect. It increases the brightness only where you want it to. This technique may be used for the final brightening of both the blue and green curved shapes.

Step 27

Here is the preview at 100% size. Using the adjustment layer generates good looking overburns.

Final result

Your image is complete. Again, do not hesitate to experiment. You are only limited by your computer performance. Click the following picture to see the result at 100% in 1024px by 768px resolution.

Conclusion

It is not difficult to change the final resolution because every single layer was larger than the document window. Either you can enlarge the document size (shapes are in vectors, so there are no quality defects), or you can enlarge the canvas size (the layers stay the same, but you make visible the parts that were hidden before).

Canvas size manipulation was used when preparing the following picture at 1280px by 1024px resolution. This one deserves some adjustment, but it's up to you now. Good luck with your work!

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Comments

Leave a Comment
  1. Awesome :D

  2. Nice effect!
    thank you!!!

  3. 1st x)
    and 2nd
    LOL

  4. 3rd place! Nice man…wanted to dl it but no file there yet :))

  5. very nice glowing !

  6. Isn’t that something that we’ve seen in 200 places?
    :S I don’t think it meets the hight quality Standard of psd tuts… sorry.

  7. 5th place :P

  8. amazing!
    first to comment =]

  9. nice, simple and clean

  10. Gravatar

    chris rock

    Can we go back to the quality and USEFUL tutorials please! Thank you.

  11. I have been waiting for something like this for a long time. Thanks. :)

  12. Best Vista wallpaper tut. Good explenation and has a real vista outcome.

    I hate vista… but the interface is great!

  13. nice tut, thanks :)

  14. Nice!

    That’s not too dificult, but a great effect anyway!

    Thanks,

    David Carreira

  15. Cool effect! Very nice and simple!

  16. no one is goin to even click on this because of the great tutorial of nik ainely below this post! hahah

    nik has officially kicked evey tut’s artist writer in not only this site, in every site!!!

  17. I Love PSDTUTs!

  18. dear joe, I dont think so. You should see tuts from Vaclav he is working on right now. He will kick ass in quantity ! :)

  19. Wonderful effect! The Blue and Green on Black makes for an excellent color combination :)

    Good work on the translation Václav!

  20. I love it. It looks much better than the Vista wallpapers. :))

    Good Work.

  21. Love it, thanks :)

  22. Cool effect

  23. Cool Vista wallpaper for my Mac!

  24. Looking lovely!

    Andrew

  25. Gravatar

    Alvaro Guzmán

    @joe you did it! lol

  26. wow, this is amazing, my new desktop background!

  27. My first post at PSDTUTS. I just had to comment. I missed the memo that said you can render filter effects onto a layer mask. How long has that been going on?? I had no idea! What else have I missed?

  28. Nice pink arrow!! paint=ftw!!

    killer tut.

  29. Gravatar

    chris rock

    Why aren’t my comments beeing aproved i’m not swearing or doing anything bad. :| … Censorship i don’t like it. :( I’m like the first time on this site. And bam … i get censored. Or do new people on this site need to be approved at least 1 time?

  30. Does it really friggin’ matter what order you commented in? Grow up.

    As for the tutorial: Doesn’t look exactly like Vista, but in my opinion, it looks better and its that difference that makes it stand out.

  31. Very clever effects! I like it

  32. Nice!

  33. First!

  34. Ah damnit…

  35. Wow,
    This is an awesome tutorial. I´ll give it a shot for sure !
    Thanks!

  36. Humm very nice !! Thank you too

  37. Gravatar

    styxz designs

    Love this tutorial a lot! thanks :)

  38. i like the idea of taking advantage of resing the canvas or going past the canvas’ proportions.

  39. Coooooooooooooooool ! Thank U

  40. I have been waiting for something like this for a long time.

  41. Sweet, I did not how many things we can do using gradients. Thanks for the good job.

  42. Gravatar

    AngryToast

    I find this tutorial frustrating. Perhaps I am not following the directions correctly, but it seems like there are parts where some steps are missing and it makes you wonder… “wait, how did we go from there to there?”.

    Great tutorial, once you figure it out.

  43. Nice tuts. Thanks

  44. cool tut. is there any way to eliminate the color banding though? without doing something like switching to 16bit

  45. Cool let see i can do it or not

  46. Very cool! Thanks!

  47. will try this out today!! THANK YOU! :)

  48. Gravatar

    crazyhunk

    I do agree that there are many more vista wallpaper tuts…
    but must agree this is the best…..Awesome effect…

    Thanx.. :)

  49. Wonderful effect! The Blue and Green on Black makes for an excellent color combination! Very thanks for sharing.

  50. very nice tutorial with a great end result - thanks for posting.

  51. Gravatar

    Runo Web Design

    süper

  52. not exactly the same but the best attempt at trying to create the effect so far.

  53. Weeeehhh… Very, very nice… I like the hippopotamus “in love”

    Liebe Grüße.

  54. I really enjoyed doing this. I’m still playing around with the wallpaper I made with these techniques.

  55. Cool Tutorial.

    For the people who feel the need to be the first to comment, Please piss off.

  56. great one
    thanks !!

  57. Nice effect, thanks.

  58. Gravatar

    Ruth Lopez

    cooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooool

  59. The best vista style wallpaper what I’ve ever seen. And signature is nice too :)

  60. FIRST!

  61. Gravatar

    Miguel Sanchez

    no dude, i am first

  62. Men there is a point in a tutorial where (me) a new comer , gets lost , please get more precise with step 12 ! the substrac thing wont work for me (cs 3)
    sorry for my poor english.

  63. very nice work ! great vista look ! thanks for sharing.

  64. Love the colors, one of the best abstract tuts I’ve seen!

  65. Killer tutorial!

  66. @ Ben:

    Now that you’ve created the two elliptical paths, you will need to select them with the ‘Path Selection Tool’ (cursor pointer black) and some tools options will be activated in the top, select ‘Exclude Overlapping Shape Areas’ (last button of the right), and then you have now the exclusion from both paths, the result isn’t visible until you fill the path, you can do this by going to the ‘paths’ tab and selecting the first icon from the bottom -> ‘fill path with foreground color’.

    Have fun ;)

  67. Kool!!

    very simple yet pleasing effect.

  68. @everyone: your comments crack me up =)) lol

  69. Last Comment!! :P

  70. “Now that you’ve created the two elliptical paths, you will need to select them with the ‘Path Selection Tool’ (cursor pointer black) and some tools options will be activated in the top, select ‘Exclude Overlapping Shape Areas’ (last button of the right), and then you have now the exclusion from both paths, the result isn’t visible until you fill the path, you can do this by going to the ‘paths’ tab and selecting the first icon from the bottom -> ‘fill path with foreground color’.”

    Thanks, this part is very important and a huge road block if you didn’t know it…..

  71. thanks !! - glsmaster .

  72. Dont understand how you did the part with the Elipical tool where you subtract paths i tried searching and cant work it out

    nice outcome

  73. Gravatar

    john smith

    i really do feel like there are steps missing

  74. Very cool looking tutorial. If only i was smart enough to follow it =P

  75. Gravatar

    Ariful Alam Khan

    Nice

  76. Got lost at step 10 :s

  77. A lot of information was missing. The tutorial tells you what to do, but not how to do it. Not for Photoshop newbs.

  78. there are a lot of confusing and misleading parts in this tutorial. I think a little editing is needed. I hit a road block right at the begininnig where you say “Choose the lasso tool” but you don’t say what to do with it besides “choose a part of the document”. That line would be appropriate if you’d have been using the magic wand tool.

  79. Can the issue be addressed as to why comments need to be moderated?

  80. Ok - this is probably one of the most confusing things I’ve ever read. So many steps need to be explained and clarified. How the heck did this make it up here. This should be on a template site or something

  81. Gravatar

    godonholiday

    Read glsmaster’s post… he explains how you get over the path problem. To select the two paths you need to hold down shift.

    cheers glsmaster.

  82. Gravatar

    godonholiday

    however there are still some issues with the steps provided..

  83. Gravatar

    irishangeleyes

    Nice tutorial.
    Thanks to glsmaster for his explanations!
    I needed it!

  84. 52nd!!

  85. i can’t follow it

    i think you miss a lot of steps

  86. Vista wishes it could look this good ;)

    Nice basic effects good to layer. I like it!

  87. cool technic thanks

  88. Great outcome, BUT I think the tutorial was poorly put together.
    Why ask all the questions about the gradients for the first 13 steps? Just explain how to do it.
    You lost me after steps 12 and 13 with color filling in layers. I thought these were paths?
    I got it on my own, but I just thought this tutorial was more complicated to follow than the others
    I’ve read for similar wall paper styles.

  89. Very Cool Tutorial thanks

  90. awesome tutorial! :) ty

  91. Nice Tut, I’ll just have a question because of this tut I saw it comes originally from here http://www.grafika.cz/art/photoshop/pspvelikonocepoz1.html as you mentioned it…

    I saw a nice other tut on grafika and would love to be translated to:
    First Part of the tut:

    http://www.grafika.cz/art/photoshop/pspparallels1.html

    Second Part:

    http://www.grafika.cz/art/photoshop/pspparallels2.html

    kindest regards
    s!

  92. Gravatar

    borromini

    I love this tutorial! I think this is the best light effect posted.

  93. Gravatar

    Jayjay402

    Great tut! Thank-you very much! =D

  94. This graphic is perfect for backgrounds I need for my security surveillance distribution. I am in desperate need of a face lift for this and this looks just like the one!

  95. Excellent Tut.

  96. sweet tutorial, going to give it a go in after effects, see if i can get some interesting results, will post links if i do.

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