Photoshop How-To: Making Warhol-style Images

This story is taken from “Adobe Photoshop CS Creative Studio.”
The brightly colored, slightly posterized image made popular by Andy Warhol is almost a cliché these days, but there’s no denying that the style has impact. After all, by employing this method, Warhol was able to turn mundane soup cans into works of art and make Liza Minnelli an international style icon.
It’s easy to mimic the Warhol style in Photoshop CS, but to do it correctly involves more than simply applying the posterize filter and slapping on some color. Using adjustment layers, channel mixers, and more let you create better-looking results.

Warhol-style pictures are especially eye-catching when grouped together. The repeating shapes create rhythm while the varied colors add pizzazz. In this tutorial by Luanne Seymour Cohen, you’ll learn how to transform ordinary photographs into works of art in Photoshop CS, and then combine them into an image grid with impact.
We’ve posted this excerpt as a PDF file. All you do is click this link “Warhol-style Images” to open the PDF file in your Web browser. You can also download the PDF to your machine for later viewing.
To open the PDF, you’ll need a full version of Adobe Acrobat (5 or higher) or the Adobe Reader, which you can download here.
Excerpted from “Adobe Photoshop CS Creative Studio” © 2004 Luanne Seymour Cohen. Reproduced by permission of Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Peachpit Press. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
This article was last modified on July 18, 2023
This article was first published on September 15, 2004
The link to the PDF is working, but perhaps there’s something in your browser set-up that’s preventing the download.
The direct link is /wp-content/uploads/sites/default/files/story_images/091504_PSwarhol.pdf
Terri Stone
Editor in Chief, CreativePro.com
When I click on the link, a blank page comes up.
he’s cool
I much appreciate the heads up!
Terri Stone
Editor in Chief, CreativePro.com
Just wanted to let you know that the “Warhol-style Images” PDF file is a broken link.
Thanks!