Hi. This is Marty from Blue Lightning TV.
I'm going to show you how to quickly & easily create
the look of handwritten words on a foggy, rainy, window pane. 
I provided this image for you to download, so you can follow along. It's link is located in the video description
or project files. Open an nighttime, outdoor
photo that you'd like to use to place behind
the window. It'll add color, contrast and
depth to our final image. To get it into our
window pane document, press "v" to open your
Move Tool and hold down Shift as you drag
it onto the window pane tab. Without releasing
your mouse or pen, drag it down onto the image
and release. Pressing Shift will keep it centered.
To reduce or enlarge it, open your Transform
Tool by pressing Ctrl + T on Windows or Cmd
+ T on a Mac. If your photo is too large to
see the entire Transform's bounding box, as
in this case, press Ctrl or Cmd + 0 to fit
it onto your screen. Go to a corner and when
you see a diagonal, double-arrow, hold down
Shift + Alt on Windows or Shift + Option on
a Mac as you drag it in or out. Once you're
happy with its size and position, press Enter or Return. To see your image at 100% again, press Ctrl or Cmd + 1.
Next, we'll blur the photo, but to do it non-destructively, we'll convert the photo into Smart Object. Click the icon
on the upper, right corner of the Layers panel
and click Convert to Smart Object. Go to Filter,
Blur and Gaussian Blur. Blur it 10 pixels
and click OK. Change its Blend Mode to Overlay.
As you can see when I toggle back and forth,
our window now has more contrast, depth and
color. Click the thumbnail of the background
to make it active and open your Horizontal
Type Tool. Choose a font. I'm using Yellowtail
Regular. If you'd like to use it, I provided
its link, as well. For this font, I'll use
a size of 284 points, Sharp, Center Alignment
and black for the color. Click on your document
and type out your text. To reposition it,
open your Move Tool and move it. To angle
it, open your Transform Tool, go to a corner
and when you see a curved, double-arrow, rotate
it counter-clockwise. Then, press Enter or
Return. To add drips to to your text, you
can either draw them in with the Pencil Tool
or, as in this example,  you use the Liquify filter. Go to Filter and Liquify.
When you see this message, click OK to rasterize
the type. When Liquify opens, the default
tool is the Forward Warp Tool. We'll use it
to make the drips. On the right, you can adjust
the brush's size and pressure. Make the pressure:
100 and for this font, I'll use a size of
40. Drag the tool downward over your type
to create drip-like shapes. 
When you're done, click OK and change the Blend Mode to Overlay. If you have a couple of lines of
text, and want to make an area pop
a bit more, make a copy of your text by pressing
Ctrl or Cmd + J. Click the Layer Mask icon
to make a layer mask next to the text copy.
Invert the layer mask by pressing Ctrl or
Cmd + I. The black layer mask is now hiding
or masking out the text copy. We're going
to brush white across the text which will
reveal the text copy through the layer mask.
Make sure white is your foreground color.
Open your Brush Tool, make the Size large, the Hardness: 0% and the Opacity between 25 and 50%. 
Now, brush across your text.
This is Marty from Blue Lightning TV. Thanks for watching!
 
