Photoshop Tips Main

outer glow

 

The Outer Glow effect is created by making a layer below the layer it is applied to, and filling the same area as the content in the layer above with a 75% opacity yellow in Screen mode. The filled shapes are slightly bigger than the shapes they are applied to, thus the glow.
     Here is what the effect layer looks like, all by itself, when extracted from the example image at the bottom of the page.
Outer Glow alone
The effect has quite a few variables that can be set.
Outer Glow dialog box
Here is the image I will use in the examples below. This shows an Outer Glow with only default settings. Use it for reference.
Outer Glow default

 

  • Blend Mode - As a rule, glows, or highlights will use the Screen blend mode. However, feel free to try other modes for unusual effects. Below is the example image using the Multiply blend mode.
  • Opacity - Glows, shadows, and highlights all need some transparency. Adobe seems to like 75 % for them all.
  • Noise - Adds random transparency variations. If you need texture in your glow, use this. The example below had a Noise setting of 50.
  • Gradient or Color - This area doesn’t really have a name. You can pick one of the two choices via radio button. Choose this one:
    color glow
    to add a one color glow. Click on the color square to choose a new color (as I did, changing yellow to red).
    Choose this one:
    gradient inner glow
    and then pick a gradient by clicking on the little tiny down arrow to the right of the gradient thumbnail to add a multicolor gradient glow.
  • Technique - Offers the choices of Softer or Precise. As a rule, Softer is better. Precise is supposed to be better for adding glows to things with sharp corners and intricate details. Here is an example of Precise.
 
  • Spread - This works in concert with the Size setting. It varies the proportion of fully opaque to transparency within the glow effect. The example below shows an Outer Glow with the Spread setting increased to 50.
    Spread 50
  • Size - This determines the extent of the glow. The Spread setting will determine how much of this area is covered by more or less transparent color, but the Size setting determines the boundaries of the effect
  • Contour - Varies the shading within the glow. Try different ones for interesting effects. See the Contour page for more detailed information on contours. The example below used one of the Ring contours.
    Ring contour
  • Range - Determines what portion of the contour is showing in the glow. This has unexpected results, so experiment with it to find settings you like.
  • Jitter - Adds random variations to the glow’s colors. You must be using a glow with at least two colors to see any effect. Since the default glow uses only one color (yellow), I switched to a Spectrum gradient glow to create the example below with a large Jitter setting.
    Specturm with Jitter
 

Here is the standard example image with a default Outer Glow effect applied.
Outer Glow
And here is the Layers palette after the effect was deconstructed by choosing Layer > Layer Style > Create Layers.

Go to Inner Glow

 

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