The Ultimate Photoshop Resource

How to wrap text around a photo in Photoshop tutorial


In this Photoshop tutorial, I’m going to show you how to wrap text around a photo using displacement maps and image warp. This method will make the text follow every contour and wrinkle and produce a very realistic result. You can wrap pretty much anything around any photo using this technique. I have another very popular tutorial I wrote where I’m wrapping  text on the surface of a rock. 

In this tutorial, I give you written instructions as well as a video, which I have been doing for most of our tutorials now.

Here is the video

 

Step 1

Matching Perspective of the Photograph

I began with a photograph that I got from Adobe stock

 

wrap text around image photoshop tutorial

Step 2

Create some type in Photoshop on a new layer

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 10.48.10 AM

Step 3

In order to warp the text, it has to be Rasterized as you can’t warp native text

Right click in the Layers panel and choose “Rasterize Type”

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 10.48.27 AM

Step 4

Press Cmd/Ctrl+T for free Transform
Right click and select Warp

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 10.48.46 AM

Step 5

Drag on the grid to match the perspective of the photograph

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 10.50.03 AM

 

Displacement Map, matching the wrinkles in the photo

Step 6

Hide the text layer and click on the image layer

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 10.50.38 AM

Step 7

Open the channels panel.

Choose the channel with the most contrast detail in the duct tape, in this case it’s the green channel. We want to create a brand new document from this channel. The document should be in multi-channel mode (eek!) Don’t worry, it’s easy, follow along…

 

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 10.50.54 AM

Step 8

Right click on the channel and choose “Duplicate Channel”

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 10.51.11 AM

Step 9

You will see a dialog box

Change the Destination to “new” and name it (remember the name)

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 10.51.52 AM

Step 10

A new document will now be created from this channel this will be in Multi channel mode.

Open up levels (Cmd/Ctrl+L)

Add contrast by moving the triangles in the levels. In this case I moved the blacks and mids. The goal is to get as much contrast as possible while still keeping details in black and whites.

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 10.53.45 AM

Step 11

Right now the detail will make the text unreadable, so we need to soften it

Choose Filter>Blur>Gaussian Blur and choose an amount that gets rid of fine detail while still keeping the wrinkles. This image was large, so 9.9 works. If your image is smaller, use a less amount, maybe 5.

 

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 10.54.14 AM

Step 12

This is our map for displacement. Choose a location and name that you can remember and and save this image as a psd (Its has to be a PSD or it wont work).  I named it map-photoshopCAFE.psd

Using the Displacement Map

Step 13

Go back to your original document.

Click on RGB in the channels to make sure all channels are back on.

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 10.54.37 AM

Step 14

In the Layers panel, turn on the text layer and make sure it’s the active layer.

We are now ready to displace it

 

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 10.54.48 AM

Step 15

Choose Filter>Distort>Displace

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 10.55.03 AM

Step 16

The Displace box comes up with a default of 10 and 10 for vertical and horizontal. (This works for most images)

For smaller images try 5, for larger try 15 (You might have to try a number and undo and try a different one if its too weak or too strong)

 

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 10.55.59 AM

Step 17

Once you click on, a box will appear asking you to locate the Displacement map image.

This is the one we created earlier. Choose it!

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 10.55.34 AM

Step 18

And, bam! You text should now wrap nicely! Almost done!

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 10.56.27 AM

Xtra Credit

For a bit more realism, you could lower the opacity a little bit and soften the edges with a tiny bit of blur. Also try different blending modes to blend it even better.

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 10.57.05 AM

Here is our final result! I used overlay blend more and duplicated the text layer so it would be darker.

wraptextotoaphoto

 

I hope you enjoyed this! Check out more tutorials here at PhotoshopCAFE, as new one is added every week!

Thanks for reading!

Colin

 

CS6 Superguide

All the CS6 information and more is available as a PDF magazine called the CS6 Superguide. If you’re on our list, you will receive it free by email as soon as it’s available. If not, sign up now and get the CS6 Superguide for free. Or click the image below.


One response to “How to wrap text around a photo in Photoshop tutorial”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.


Access The Photoshop Vault

Unlock dozens of valuable Photoshop resources for FREE

The Ultimate

Photoshop Resource