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How can you design a futuristic cityscape poster in Adobe Photoshop that blends real photos with digital painting to show how Earth might look in the year 2100?

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To design a futuristic cityscape poster in Adobe Photoshop, you can follow these steps:


1. Concept & Reference Gathering

Start by defining your vision — is the future utopian (clean, advanced, green cities) or dystopian (polluted, robotic, neon-lit)?
Collect references such as skyscrapers, neon lights, sci-fi architecture, flying vehicles, and night cityscapes.


2. Base Composition

  • Create a new canvas (e.g., 1920x1080 px).

  • Import real city photos as your base.

  • Use the Lasso Tool / Pen Tool to cut and arrange buildings, roads, and skies into a dramatic composition.

  • Apply Perspective Transform (Ctrl+T) to align elements properly.


3. Digital Painting & Futuristic Elements

  • On new layers, paint futuristic structures using Soft Round Brushes or Custom Sci-Fi Brushes.

  • Add light trails, flying cars, glowing signs, and holographic ads to bring the scene to life.

  • Use Layer Modes (Screen, Overlay, Color Dodge) to blend the painted parts with the real photo.


4. Lighting & Atmosphere

  • Add a gradient map or color lookup adjustment layer for a cohesive futuristic tone (neon blue, purple, pink).

  • Use the Dodge & Burn Tools to create depth and light direction.

  • Apply Fog or Glow effects using soft white brushes and low opacity.


5. Final Touches

  • Add text (e.g., “Earth 2100” or “New Dawn Metropolis”) in a futuristic font.

  • Sharpen key details using High Pass Filter for realism.

  • Export the final poster in .JPG or .PNG at high resolution.


💡 Tip:

Use Generative Fill (in Photoshop Beta) to expand or replace background areas seamlessly — great for extending horizons or adding futuristic elements quickly.


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Hey @YogeshRa1 - thanks for reaching out! This question seems like it will be better suited to the Photoshop community in the Creative Cloud communities. I'm going to close out this question to keep this discussion space relevant to Adobe Campaign.

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Correct answer by
Administrator

Hey @YogeshRa1 - thanks for reaching out! This question seems like it will be better suited to the Photoshop community in the Creative Cloud communities. I'm going to close out this question to keep this discussion space relevant to Adobe Campaign.