You can now adjust your texture overlay as needed. Rasterizing to a mask will give you a preview of how your image looks when used as a texture overlay. This will apply your image to the layer below as a layer mask. Right-click the texture layer, then select Rasterize to Mask. Make sure that your texture is larger than the subject, and that no elements of the subject stick out from behind the texture. Next, we’re going to position the texture overlay on top of the subject so that it is covering it completely. The image will be placed wherever you click on the canvas. Once selected, simply click on the canvas to place the texture overlay. To import your texture overlay, navigate to File > Place and locate your textures on your hard drive. Make sure to save them on your hard drive so that they can be located with ease.
Feel free to utilize my bundle of grunge textures if you need a texture to work with. As mentioned previously, texture overlays use a scale of black and white - and every gray shade in-between - to determine the transparent and opaque areas of the subject they’re applied to.īe sure to check out my pack of 15 free grunge textures if you don’t have any other textures to work with, or if you simply want to follow along with this lesson. It’s important that the texture you import is only black and white and consists of no other colors. Now we need to import the texture overlay that we’d like to apply to the subject. If you’d like to apply your texture to a single object then you can disregard this step as your object is already on a single layer. Your objects must all be on a single layer if you’d like to apply a texture overlay to them. This should place all of your objects on a single layer. So if you want to apply the text to a grouping of objects, make sure to select all of them and group them together by navigating to Layer > Group. The only way we can apply a texture overlay with Affinity Designer is if we apply it to a single layer.