Photography
Get a retro look with halftone effects.
Cruise back to an old-school CMYK printing style with Adobe Photoshop.
Photography
Cruise back to an old-school CMYK printing style with Adobe Photoshop.
Use a halftone filter in Adobe Photoshop to evoke the look of old-fashioned colour printing. Halftones were developed by 20th-century printers for presses that used only cyan, magenta, yellow and black (CMYK) inks. Fields of tiny dots in those four colours created every shade that could be printed. You can easily recreate this retro technique for a vintage look in your own pop art, screen printing or graphic design.
Halftone is a 20th-century printing technique where patterns of dots were used to create images. At a time when printing processes were limited, halftone was the method used to create the appearance of colours and shades. Today, simulating halftone effects is a way to reference or play with vintage photo effects by evoking the dotted, grainy look of old-fashioned colour printing.
Early colour presses used only cyan, magenta, yellow and black (CMYK) inks. Printers developed the halftone as a way to print a wider spectrum of colours. Halftones were made up of fields of tiny dots in those four colours, positioned closely together . When grouped together, the dots appeared to mix and form other shades. Using just these four colours, together with variations in dot spacing, pattern and size, printers mixed and matched halftones to produce all of the colours that could be printed.
Follow this quick and easy tutorial to add a halftone pattern in Photoshop.
Select the images you want to add a halftone effect to and add them to Photoshop.
In the top navigation bar, go to the Filter drop-down menu.
From the options in the Filter menu, select Pixelate.
Choose Colour Halftone in the Pixelate menu. From here, you can further adjust two other variables, Radius and Channel, to affect how the halftone texture appears.
The Radius setting affects the size of the halftone dots and the spacing in between. Adjust the size of the dots to change the gradient and blur of the colour and image. Smaller dots will look smoother and subtler, while larger dot sizes will evoke lower-grade print material like vintage comics, old advertisements or DIY grunge ‘zines.
The Channel setting adjusts the way the dots are placed and how they overlap. Each Channel is controlled by a Screen Angle setting. The value is listed in degrees. Adjusting the value changes the angle at which the Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Black dots are added to the pattern. Where the dots overlap, they can form new colours, depending on how they combine.
Halftone images are a staple of pop art, screen printing and graphic design, referencing printing styles of a bygone era. Give halftoning a try to evoke nostalgia, make something look aged or vintage or reference the first decades of colour printing.