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Create grid gradient background
Create a banded gradient in Photoshop?Which kind of gradient should I use on a gaugePhotoshop, gradient map to transparent?Any tips or principles for applying gradient to thin shapes and fonts?How to do a gradient in the same contour of the object?How would I create a gradient background like this?How do I make a geometric gradient background like this using Photoshop?In Inkscape, is there a way to apply an alpha mask or gradient over another color gradient?Adobe Illustrator: put a radial gradient over solid backgroundHow to make circular gradient in SVG?Smooth gradient overlay on image in Sketch
I want to create a gradient background like the background in the image below:
I have tried the solution in this post but the result is not satisfying.
As it can be seen in this picture, it seems that two radial gradient are applied together, if I reduce the number of colors(as it was suggested in the mentioned solution) I will have something like this:
which has curved boundaries for each color, But in the desired image the colors should be bounded by a linear grid. If I change the radial gradient to a linear one, an other problem would occur since the colors should be brighter in some areas in the radial fashion.
As it can be seen in the original picture, its like a gradient modifier is applied then the pixels of the image got enlarged! I have tried several other solutions(including drawing from scratch and it worked!) but I have yet to find an easy solution for this problem.
adobe-illustrator adobe-photoshop gradient grids
New contributor
add a comment |
I want to create a gradient background like the background in the image below:
I have tried the solution in this post but the result is not satisfying.
As it can be seen in this picture, it seems that two radial gradient are applied together, if I reduce the number of colors(as it was suggested in the mentioned solution) I will have something like this:
which has curved boundaries for each color, But in the desired image the colors should be bounded by a linear grid. If I change the radial gradient to a linear one, an other problem would occur since the colors should be brighter in some areas in the radial fashion.
As it can be seen in the original picture, its like a gradient modifier is applied then the pixels of the image got enlarged! I have tried several other solutions(including drawing from scratch and it worked!) but I have yet to find an easy solution for this problem.
adobe-illustrator adobe-photoshop gradient grids
New contributor
what have you tried? do the same as the answer you linked, but with radial gradients instead (in the image above it looks like there are 2 gradient centers)
– Luciano
13 hours ago
@Luciano I have tried that solution, maybe I should mention it's problems in the post.
– lino
13 hours ago
yes, you can edit your question to add more information, that'd be great
– Luciano
13 hours ago
add a comment |
I want to create a gradient background like the background in the image below:
I have tried the solution in this post but the result is not satisfying.
As it can be seen in this picture, it seems that two radial gradient are applied together, if I reduce the number of colors(as it was suggested in the mentioned solution) I will have something like this:
which has curved boundaries for each color, But in the desired image the colors should be bounded by a linear grid. If I change the radial gradient to a linear one, an other problem would occur since the colors should be brighter in some areas in the radial fashion.
As it can be seen in the original picture, its like a gradient modifier is applied then the pixels of the image got enlarged! I have tried several other solutions(including drawing from scratch and it worked!) but I have yet to find an easy solution for this problem.
adobe-illustrator adobe-photoshop gradient grids
New contributor
I want to create a gradient background like the background in the image below:
I have tried the solution in this post but the result is not satisfying.
As it can be seen in this picture, it seems that two radial gradient are applied together, if I reduce the number of colors(as it was suggested in the mentioned solution) I will have something like this:
which has curved boundaries for each color, But in the desired image the colors should be bounded by a linear grid. If I change the radial gradient to a linear one, an other problem would occur since the colors should be brighter in some areas in the radial fashion.
As it can be seen in the original picture, its like a gradient modifier is applied then the pixels of the image got enlarged! I have tried several other solutions(including drawing from scratch and it worked!) but I have yet to find an easy solution for this problem.
adobe-illustrator adobe-photoshop gradient grids
adobe-illustrator adobe-photoshop gradient grids
New contributor
New contributor
edited 13 hours ago
lino
New contributor
asked 13 hours ago
linolino
1084
1084
New contributor
New contributor
what have you tried? do the same as the answer you linked, but with radial gradients instead (in the image above it looks like there are 2 gradient centers)
– Luciano
13 hours ago
@Luciano I have tried that solution, maybe I should mention it's problems in the post.
– lino
13 hours ago
yes, you can edit your question to add more information, that'd be great
– Luciano
13 hours ago
add a comment |
what have you tried? do the same as the answer you linked, but with radial gradients instead (in the image above it looks like there are 2 gradient centers)
– Luciano
13 hours ago
@Luciano I have tried that solution, maybe I should mention it's problems in the post.
– lino
13 hours ago
yes, you can edit your question to add more information, that'd be great
– Luciano
13 hours ago
what have you tried? do the same as the answer you linked, but with radial gradients instead (in the image above it looks like there are 2 gradient centers)
– Luciano
13 hours ago
what have you tried? do the same as the answer you linked, but with radial gradients instead (in the image above it looks like there are 2 gradient centers)
– Luciano
13 hours ago
@Luciano I have tried that solution, maybe I should mention it's problems in the post.
– lino
13 hours ago
@Luciano I have tried that solution, maybe I should mention it's problems in the post.
– lino
13 hours ago
yes, you can edit your question to add more information, that'd be great
– Luciano
13 hours ago
yes, you can edit your question to add more information, that'd be great
– Luciano
13 hours ago
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
Using Photoshop:
Start with a background with the size and resolution needed for the flyer:
Add a Gaussian Blur:
Menu Filter → Pixelate → Mosaic:
add a comment |
You can try:
- create an image with as much pixels as you want squares
- apply a brush with low hardness (to produce blurred borders)
- resize using Nearest Neighbor
add a comment |
I'm just gonna toss this one up here - was working on this for a little bit whilst apparently this query got answered and accepted - and a good answer too.
Mine's similar to @Luciano's, but I worked my approach entirely in Affinity Designer.
First I made a base pixelated background document, very small, for-web, 26 pix wide, then laid out a background rectangle and two ellipses - coloured 'em and applied a gaussian blur to the two ellipses.
Turned on Pixel View to be sure it would look as I expected:
And it did:
Exported that 1:1 as a .png
, and placed that into the background of a new Affinity Designer file I drew the layout and other vector design elements in: it's rough and unfinished, clearly, but you get the idea:
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Using Photoshop:
Start with a background with the size and resolution needed for the flyer:
Add a Gaussian Blur:
Menu Filter → Pixelate → Mosaic:
add a comment |
Using Photoshop:
Start with a background with the size and resolution needed for the flyer:
Add a Gaussian Blur:
Menu Filter → Pixelate → Mosaic:
add a comment |
Using Photoshop:
Start with a background with the size and resolution needed for the flyer:
Add a Gaussian Blur:
Menu Filter → Pixelate → Mosaic:
Using Photoshop:
Start with a background with the size and resolution needed for the flyer:
Add a Gaussian Blur:
Menu Filter → Pixelate → Mosaic:
answered 13 hours ago
DanielilloDanielillo
23.8k13479
23.8k13479
add a comment |
add a comment |
You can try:
- create an image with as much pixels as you want squares
- apply a brush with low hardness (to produce blurred borders)
- resize using Nearest Neighbor
add a comment |
You can try:
- create an image with as much pixels as you want squares
- apply a brush with low hardness (to produce blurred borders)
- resize using Nearest Neighbor
add a comment |
You can try:
- create an image with as much pixels as you want squares
- apply a brush with low hardness (to produce blurred borders)
- resize using Nearest Neighbor
You can try:
- create an image with as much pixels as you want squares
- apply a brush with low hardness (to produce blurred borders)
- resize using Nearest Neighbor
answered 13 hours ago
LucianoLuciano
5,23241941
5,23241941
add a comment |
add a comment |
I'm just gonna toss this one up here - was working on this for a little bit whilst apparently this query got answered and accepted - and a good answer too.
Mine's similar to @Luciano's, but I worked my approach entirely in Affinity Designer.
First I made a base pixelated background document, very small, for-web, 26 pix wide, then laid out a background rectangle and two ellipses - coloured 'em and applied a gaussian blur to the two ellipses.
Turned on Pixel View to be sure it would look as I expected:
And it did:
Exported that 1:1 as a .png
, and placed that into the background of a new Affinity Designer file I drew the layout and other vector design elements in: it's rough and unfinished, clearly, but you get the idea:
add a comment |
I'm just gonna toss this one up here - was working on this for a little bit whilst apparently this query got answered and accepted - and a good answer too.
Mine's similar to @Luciano's, but I worked my approach entirely in Affinity Designer.
First I made a base pixelated background document, very small, for-web, 26 pix wide, then laid out a background rectangle and two ellipses - coloured 'em and applied a gaussian blur to the two ellipses.
Turned on Pixel View to be sure it would look as I expected:
And it did:
Exported that 1:1 as a .png
, and placed that into the background of a new Affinity Designer file I drew the layout and other vector design elements in: it's rough and unfinished, clearly, but you get the idea:
add a comment |
I'm just gonna toss this one up here - was working on this for a little bit whilst apparently this query got answered and accepted - and a good answer too.
Mine's similar to @Luciano's, but I worked my approach entirely in Affinity Designer.
First I made a base pixelated background document, very small, for-web, 26 pix wide, then laid out a background rectangle and two ellipses - coloured 'em and applied a gaussian blur to the two ellipses.
Turned on Pixel View to be sure it would look as I expected:
And it did:
Exported that 1:1 as a .png
, and placed that into the background of a new Affinity Designer file I drew the layout and other vector design elements in: it's rough and unfinished, clearly, but you get the idea:
I'm just gonna toss this one up here - was working on this for a little bit whilst apparently this query got answered and accepted - and a good answer too.
Mine's similar to @Luciano's, but I worked my approach entirely in Affinity Designer.
First I made a base pixelated background document, very small, for-web, 26 pix wide, then laid out a background rectangle and two ellipses - coloured 'em and applied a gaussian blur to the two ellipses.
Turned on Pixel View to be sure it would look as I expected:
And it did:
Exported that 1:1 as a .png
, and placed that into the background of a new Affinity Designer file I drew the layout and other vector design elements in: it's rough and unfinished, clearly, but you get the idea:
answered 6 hours ago
GerardFallaGerardFalla
5,071523
5,071523
add a comment |
add a comment |
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what have you tried? do the same as the answer you linked, but with radial gradients instead (in the image above it looks like there are 2 gradient centers)
– Luciano
13 hours ago
@Luciano I have tried that solution, maybe I should mention it's problems in the post.
– lino
13 hours ago
yes, you can edit your question to add more information, that'd be great
– Luciano
13 hours ago