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Create an Energy Drink Ad Design

In Effects by Alex Beltechi

Featuring a product in an ad is a common task for any designer. In this tutorial, we'll look at a flexible design solution that you can use to create one for an energy drink. It relies on a combination of the Difference Blending Mode and the Radial Blur Filter to achieve unique colors, contrast, and lighting.

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

The first thing that you need to do is plan a color palette. But in order to choose your colors, you need to understand how the Difference Blending Mode works. It looks at the color information in each channel and subtracts either the blend color from the base color, or the base color from the blend color. This depends on which has the higher brightness value.

Difference only works when transforming dark to light, and not light to dark. However, if you apply any type of blur to a difference layer, you'll get smooth gradients and dynamic lighting. Since the end result needs to be dark, choose bright colors that in combination with a radial blur will create gradients from light to dark.

So begin by opening a new Photoshop document at 1600px by 1280px. Fill the background layer with this color: (#b1c900).

Step 2

Bring up your Custom Shapes Menu and select the Ray shape, as shown below. You can find it under the Symbols Folder. Then draw the first one right in the middle that is large enough to spread outside the canvas. Use this color: (#bddc01).

As soon as you create the first one, duplicate it. Then rotate the copy so that it leaves just a thin line of the background. Then change it to this color: (#d3eb45). You should align them so that they match the image below.

Step 3

At this point, begin painting with a Regular Circle Brush at different sizes. Set your Brush Opacity to 60%, change the color to (#7a263e), and click individually while changing the size for each spot. By manually creating each spot, you have more control over your layout. Once you've created the first set, add a few spots on a separate layer with this new color: (#93133d).

Step 4

Next, make a new layer and add smaller spots with this color (#cdde67). Again, on a separate layer, paint even smaller spots with a slightly more saturated color: (#d9f14a).

Step 5

Now it's time to add some contrast by using a saturated version of the color that you used for the very first spots: (#93133d)

Step 6

To finish off the effect, create some small spots that follow the original layout, and others that fill the unused space of the canvas. Make sure to fade them out gradually as they approach the edge of the canvas. You don't want those to become distracting later. As a final touch, add a new color that will later be transformed into a vivid pink: (#7b2dc1).

Step 7

As pointed out before, the radial blur effect plays a crucial part in the overall image. Select all the shapes, spots, and background layers and press Ctrl+Shift+E to merge them together. After they are all merged, duplicate the layer. Name this new layer "radial blur". Then go to Filter > Blur > Radial Blur and insert the values shown below.

Step 8

You should now have two layers: the background layer that you recently merged together and its duplicated version that you named "radial blur." Select the "radial blur" layer and change its blending mode to Difference. You should now get a dark image with bright green and blue colors. It's not the hue that we want, so merge both layers together. Then go to Image > Adjustments > Hue/Saturation, or simply press Ctrl+U. Then change the Hue to 73.

Step 9

In this step you'll add some depth to the image that will guide the viewer's attention to the center of the design. Enter Quickmask Mode (Q), and use the Bucket Tool with the color set on black to fill the whole canvas. Next select the Eraser Tool, and add some scattering to it's preset.

Now drag across the canvas while focusing on the center. As soon as you're done with that, exit Quickmask Mode (Q) again, and invert the selection by pressing Ctrl+Shift+I. Then right-click on the canvas while the Marquee Tool is selected. Then chose the Layer Via Copy option. As soon as you have the selection in a new layer, go to Filter > Blur > Gaussian Blur, and blur it by 4 pixels.

Step 10

At this point it's time to add the can. So download this image from stock.xchng. Then cut it out with the Pen Tool. Don't worry about the bottom, since you will only need the top. Once you have that done, position it in the center, and rotate it at a 45 degree angle. Then change the hue by 180. The use the Burn Tool to darken the lower left half of the can.

Step 11

Now you need to hide a part of the can in order to fade it into the rest of the photo. A simple layer mask should suffice. So enter Quickmask Mode again. Then fill the entire canvas with black. Erase the part that you want left out with a soft brush. After that, exit Quickmask Mode. Then go to Layer > Layer Mask > Hide Selection. You may also want to sharpen it at this point. To do so, go to Filter > Sharpen > Sharpen.

Step 12

Now if you'll look closely at the photo, you'll notice that it's simply too smooth. Rather than adding noise or grunge, we'll mimic the can texture by using one of Fabio's tutorials: Creating a Cool Brushed Metal Surface in Photoshop. So first off, fill the canvas area with white. Then go to Filter > Pixelate > Mezzotint. Select Medium Dots and then apply the filter. Then set the layer's Blending Mode to Color Burn.

Step 13

In the final step is to add the title on the left side of the canvas. I used a font called Incised901 NdIt BT, which is the abbreviated name for Incised 901 Nord Italic. After typing it in, double-click on the layer, and use the layer style described in the photo below.

Final Result

And that's it! One energy drink ad ready to go!

Conclusion

The unique feature of this technique is that it can easily be adapted to suit a variety of different needs. Below is an example of how you can change the outcome simply by modifying the colors and shapes. It's all up to your creativity! Hopefully you will have found this tutorial helpful and useable in your designs.

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Comments

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  1. nice effect!

  2. i am first
    nice…

  3. Cool ad!!! Good idea!!!

  4. Very nice! i like it,.

  5. Very cool effect!

    I just have a question though, and I think anyone could probably answer this. I was working on a picture for about 5 hours and I was just looking at the history window when I clicked the ’snapshot’ at the very top. Now.. I clicked it, and it reverted my document all the way back to what I am assuming was my last save (ages ago).

    Then I thought, “Hey! this layer is pretty usable, maybe I can just copy it and add it to my current work…”

    Big mistake… now I cant get to my current picture. Is there anything I can do?

  6. Nice. I don’t no why but I really liked the image in step 6. Adding all of the effects after it doesn’t make it look as good. Still a good tutorial though.

  7. Nice effect and very refreshing!

  8. WOW this looks like an amazing tutorial! i’m so looking forward to try it out :)

  9. omg 4th xD

  10. The image doesnt really energize at all I think. So n1 tut but the outcome is rather disenergyzing

  11. I love it. THe effects are very nice and interesting. Good work

  12. wow… nice effect!

  13. wow, really nice.

  14. pretty fun looking tutorial! thanks

  15. Gravatar

    godonholiday

    I would like to see more of the product and maybe a slogan….

    but a great tutorial that is giving me loads of ideas!!

  16. Gravatar

    crazyhunk

    good tutorial…..

    some good techniques….. :)

  17. Good work. This would actually look good in a magazine. Adding the appropriate typography would give this the professional, finishing touch! Maybe examples on this website should show a simple version of the artwork and another one mocked up to represent an actual ‘Advert’, showing how ‘usable’ it is. Design and function are nothing without each other. In summary, a great starting point, nice simple effects to practice and master, well done Alex ***

  18. Sweet. I think the second final image is the better.

  19. I think this kind of tutorial is the most useful for us…
    Just like the previous one
    It really helps on the workflow, and show us creative ways to solve stuff…
    Thank you very much!

  20. Bit strange but not bad, there is a very similar tutorial posted here: http://www.tutorial9.net/photoshop/beverage-ad-enhancer/, VERY similar.

  21. This tutorial its waaaaay better than http://www.tutorial9.net/photoshop/beverage-ad-enhancer/

  22. Yeah I was thinking it was similar to the tutorial9 tut. And in my opinion it’s not as good.

  23. I agree with some people above, this one is quite similar with the tut over tutorial9.net

    However, I really like the end result of this tut.

    Nice job

  24. Nice

  25. Simple, easy, nice.

  26. The tutorial9 tut is similar in nature, but that is where the similarities end. No drama. Nice tutorial. Good job.

  27. Think I much prefer the tutorial9 one, however I may have liked this better if the writer stuck to the color scheme in step 6. Bit random to add all those effects, I guess its one of these trial and error tuts.

  28. NICE 1

  29. LOL you have the orginal tut that this was ripped from sitting in your user links at the moment. MMMMMMM

  30. Please people, just because it is a similar idea doesn’t mean that it was ripped.

    Nice tutorial!

  31. ;) really good

  32. to be honest I prefered it before you changed the hue, but still, a great tut.

    Thanks

  33. awesome tut m8 :) Thanx!

  34. Great…

  35. It’s amazing how such a little amount of work can produce a very complex looking final result - thanks!

  36. that was pretty cool

  37. I like the end result

  38. I don’t think the similarity to the one published over at Tutorial9 is intentional… there are plenty of differences. I like the sunburst sort of effect you’ve got going on in this article Alex! That’s a nice use of that Custom shape!

  39. Gravatar

    Callum Martin

    Great Effect! Could prove useful in a lot of things :)

  40. Besides, the posted dates are only 1 day apart. That’s quick turnaround for the tutorial writer and for the PSDTUTS editors to approve and post this tutorial.

    Nice effect from both writers!

  41. Gravatar

    ConfusedNazgul

    Uh, what? How is this ripped from tutorial9.net? Yes, they both use drinks, but the effects are completely different. You might as well say all tutorials that use the color green are ripped off each other.

  42. Simple, nice , effective!!

  43. Good techniques, however, it looks very awkward only showing a the top of the can. If this were a real campaign, it would never be approved.

  44. wow great effect, persoanlly love it, especially when i learned you used the DIFFERENCE blending mode (tutorials never use it so) thumbs up. can’t wait to try it

  45. Gravatar

    Tony Nachev

    Doesn’t look like energetic to me.

  46. the truth is that the art doesnt communicate energy, is fancy, but the art, if it will be abstract, must at least communicate the concept of the product, if not is just decoration with no sense.

  47. Gravatar

    Ariful Alam Khan

    nice tut. Thanks

  48. This is a great tutorial for learning a lot of different effects, modes, and tools. The final result looks good, but I think the tutorial serves a better purpose for learning Photoshop.

  49. Very cool effect

  50. not bad, it surely beats the shit out of Tutorial9’s. Keep this one. Looks better.

  51. GOOD WORK :)

  52. Not bad, thanks!

  53. Gravatar

    VertigoSFX

    Beautiful outcome..i’m gonna have to try that.

  54. It started off looking so great until Step 7 and onwards where you kinda ruined it. Sorry :(

  55. This is pretty cool

  56. nice tut.. but too dark i think.. / it;s more like “the dark side drink” then energy…

  57. Nice, but one little thing bugs me: the opening of the can is upside down. That would be difficult to drink. :) Especially for the fatigued.

  58. Very cool.

  59. Hello everyone,

    This is indeed a small world after all…
    Yes, there are similarities between the two, but they are both independent. Due to the increasing number of tuts being published out there it’s pretty hard to create something entirely unique. That is what I was trying to do, but it turns out that it was being planned elsewhere too. Fortunately, mine and tutorial9’s are made using different techniques, so hopefully you may be able to find both useful.

    Thank you,
    Alex

  60. Gravatar

    Zach LeBar

    Definitely think the tutorial 9 tut is better than this one, and extremely similar in style. I expected to see a link to it in the intro as inspiration, but it wasn’t there.

    :( don’t know about the credibility of this one, like Tim said, if it were a real campaign, not enough of the product is shown to allow the buyer to recognize it and commit it to memory.

  61. In this case, there was no inspiration from the other tutorial. This tutorial has been in line to be published for at least a week, possibly two. I handle the approval of the user links, so I certainly saw the tut over on Tutorial 9. I think Tyler did a good job over there. The tutorial Alex put together here is great as well. I look forward to working with him again.

    I exchanged emails with Alex for a month while he developed this tutorial concept, and I’m confident these two tutorials were developed independently. I think they have different flavors to each of these tuts, and possibly to the soda involved as well :)

    Thx.

  62. Makes me thirsty.

    I really like the bubble effect.

  63. Wow Great effect! Really nice bubble.

  64. Gravatar

    Marcelo Kanzaki

    How’s that supposed to be an ad if the product is hidden?

    Nice effect though!

  65. there’s no accounting for taste, i guess. not pretty.

  66. Gravatar

    raine spooke

    i like this tutorial, well, the end result’s look, and i’d love to do it. but… everytime i get to the part where i have to set the hue to “73″ it turned the background hot pink, with the circles like, orange and a gross green… lol, uhm, it looks IDENTICLE to what’s on the tut beforehand… but… yeah
    any help? ^^’

  67. @ all who think this is a ripped tutorial… The fact that the two tutorials were published 1 day apart from each other should be reason enough not question the “credibility of this one”. I’m affraid these comments are simply mean spirited. Head over to his flickr account (www.flickr.com/photos/alexbeltechi) and see if he is capable of producing good looking images - not to mention original.

  68. @raine spooke: You most likely created the shapes, duplicated them into a second layer, added radial blur on the second layer, set the ‘radial blur’ layer’s style to ‘difference’ and then changed its hue by 73. Try to not change the hue just yet, as you need to do one more thing.

    As soon as you create the ‘radial blur’ layer, set it on difference. Then merge all layers or flatten the entire image. Only then change the hue to 73. Thanks for asking, hopefully it will be ok now.

  69. I kinda agree with Mac Tips - I too like the image in step 6 - the effects are interesting, but like the last tutorial, sometimes the ’simpler’ looking images have a greater visual impact.

  70. Gravatar

    segfaultii

    Cool effect, but hardly an advert. In an advert you should see the actual product, it must have the most attention. You want to sell it!

  71. Gravatar

    Lesley Nevejans

    Weird, for some reason I just couldn’t find that ray shape in my custom shapes menu…

    Is it possible to download it somewhere?

    Lesley

  72. YAY! More abstract/explosion effects!!! We need a lot more of these!!

    C’mon…

  73. Gravatar

    James Aitchison

    I am also having the same issue as Lesley.

    I have had a search around but I haven’t come across the ‘Ray Shape’ in my Custom Shapes Menu.

    Any assistance would be grateful.

    Cheers,

    James

  74. Amazing effect! I agree with Joe…we need more… version!

  75. @ Laura

    Sorry, I was being sarcastic. If you’ve seen one abstract explosion effect, you’ve seen em’ all.

  76. @joe, tuts aren’t about effects, it’s about how to get there.

  77. @ Jin Y

    That’s all well and good but when you’ve got what seems like the same effect over and over, it gets dull. It contributes to the dullness of today’s younger designers that seemingly can’t think for themselves to produce their own concepts.

  78. Nice tut! :)

  79. Good Job Thx.

  80. To see the ray shape click on the arrow next to the shapes and select “All” from the drop-down menu. The screenshot will make it clear: http://img81.imageshack.us/img81/8135/shapesoz2.jpg

    Thanks for the great tut!

  81. Nice effects…. lovely tutorial..!
    great job..!!

  82. Hello,

    If you don’t have the ray like shape this set should work fine:
    http://myphotoshopbrushes.com/custom_shapes/id/2002

  83. Thanks Alex

    Also a great tutorial…

    Lesley

  84. To me this looks ok but ultimately fails. Firstly dark colours don’t really say “energize”. If that is the message you are trying to get, then bright colours are a must. dark colours are better suited to more sexy/laid back advertising. Secondly for something that is advertising a product that is pretty much covered 80% because of some effects, it doesn’t really help to sell the idea when people can’t see what is on the can to then recognise it when they are out and about in a store. I don’t feel that cutting the can in half helped. I have never seen a product advertised that was cut in half! It is for these two reasons I think this ultimately fails. It looks fine, it just doesn’t do what it is supposed to.

  85. LOL @ the guys who thought they posted 1st and 4th. Great tutorial, trying it out as i type/speak

  86. it’s really awsome! :)

  87. Amazing. It was such a coincidence, I was looking for an idea to promote cosmic bowling and this was the newest post when I got the homepage!
    here’s what i did http://i5.photobucket.com/albums/y160/j_syk/cosmicbowl.jpg
    I prefer to take these kind of tutorials and add my own style, like the example at the end using squares and different color tones, but the circles and neon and glow colors were perfect. Thanks a ton.

  88. Thanks, great tutorial

  89. good work my friend , i’ll try to do like this ,,

    thanks

  90. I’ve been really loving this trend lately. This sort of style, a little graffiti mixed in with grunge mixed with neon colors. It’s HOT

  91. I have tried several tutorials on this site, and this is the last one I will waste my time on. Like so many others I have tried, this tutorial is wrought with errors. For example, in Step 8 after I adjust the hue to 73, my image turns pink, not the blue-greenish shown in the tutorial. What gives?

    Again - I’m not wasting my time with anymore error-ridden tutorials on this site. Thanks anyway.

  92. I added some correction to Step 8 of this tutorial. Thanks.

  93. Gravatar

    Karthick

    sooperb tutoriallllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll

  94. I love it!

  95. Great!!! But hard for beginer users…

  96. Way to cool!

  97. Nice and really good..

  98. Excellent Tutorials

  99. Fantastic effort, is this a common approach you use for product ads?

  100. “Hello,

    If you don’t have the ray like shape this set should work fine:
    http://myphotoshopbrushes.com/custom_shapes/id/2002

    alex, thanks for this one. appreciate that

  101. Where can I get the first shape. Some help would be appreciated

  102. PLease tell me where i can find that shape :(
    i don`t have it in my photoshop.
    If anyone can help me please type on my mail -> zero_2004@abv.bg

    Thank you!

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