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Jaakie201

aka Jacques Maes is a 29.28 year old boy and has been a part of the Threadless community for 3 years, 7 months! he has scored 12347 submissions, giving an average score of 2.34, helping 201 designs get printed.

www.jacquesandlise.com

I have 1 design open for scoring

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Recent Comments

  • Only use the warp tool if the shirt is slightly curved and you want your design to match that. When you're doing warping in photoshop, best to start from a larger image and do it one free-transform session. When scaling your design in free-transform, you can right click to change free-transform to warp mode. Doing it in one step instead of two prevents a blurry result, otherwise you are blowing up pixels.

    With the warp mode selected, at the top of the screen you can see the options, presets and places to enter values, you can also drag curves by hand but it is more messy. Just play with it by adding subtle values, a slight curve more often is enough.

    posted 10 hours, 19 minutes ago in How Do I Make Realistic Looking T-Shirt Mock-Ups

  • Hey Speakerine, just checking if you received my reply to your email this time around?

    posted 13 hours, 8 minutes ago in The Invisibles - Rescoring !

  • Solstice, Rush 'n attack, California Games, ... I apologize if these are horrible

    posted 1 day, 4 hours ago in Best NES Games

  • Cut out the shirt of the picture you want to use, make sure this is a blank tee (or by using the clone-tool to make it look like a blank tee). Once you have the shirt as a different layer, convert it to grayscale and play with the levels so it receives the look of a white tee with gray/darker folds. Set this layer to multiply. Below this layer you can make a new layer in the selection of the shirt and give it a color or color-overlay, put your design in a layer above that. The initial layer that is set to multiply will put the folds of the shirt above your design making it look like a real shirt.

    You can play with this even more, by also making an extra layer for highlights (for even more realism). Play with blending modes on groups and use adjustment layers inside them for even more control.

    There are a lot of templates out there already with all the work done for you, where you only need to add your artwork in the right place and the other layers will do the work. Checking out these templates will also give a better idea on how to create them yourself.

    posted 2 days, 17 hours ago in How Do I Make Realistic Looking T-Shirt Mock-Ups

  • Really cool selection, digging a lot of these! Congrats all

    posted 4 days, 8 hours ago in SPOILER ALERT 6/14/2013 Pictures up on flickr

I have been printed 4 times

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