Learn how to create transparent text, that looks like it's made from glass.
Let's start with a background image to put our text on. I've quickly made this background that looks like some sort of distorted stand, it's going to be a good place to put the text on. Save the image below and open it in Photoshop:
Create a new layer on top of the background and name it
text shape. Select a text tool

from the
tools palette and define the following settings for the font:
Now pick a white color and write some text. Since it's a small background, you can only write a few letters so i've decided to write
FX:
Right-click on the text layer and choose
Convert To Shape from the popup menu. Now press
CTRL+T to start transformation process and, while holding your
CTRL key, drag the corner handles until you get this transformation shape:
OK we have a basic shape, let's do something with it. First, right-click it and select
Rasterize Layer. Then make this layer invisible by clicking on the eye icon next to it. We don't really need this text, we will only use it to load the selection of the text's shape. Press
CTRL+J to duplicate this layer and unhide the duplicate. Now set its fill to 0% (a setting next to the opacity in the layers panel). Also rename this new layer to
stroke. Double-click the layer and add a 1 pixel white outer stroke:
Create a layer below the
stroke layer, select them both and press
CTRL+E to merge them together. Now press
CTRL+J to duplicate the
stroke layer. Reselect the original layer (the one below) and select the move tool

from the
tools palette. Now press the left cursor button on your keyboard (the one that moves the caret to the left :) once. Duplicate the current layer and once again press the left cursor button. Do this 4-5 times. You will notice the stroke thickening with every operation. Select the topmost stroke layer and keep pressing
CTRL+E until you merge all the duplicates to the
stroke layer. The only layers left should be the background, an invisible
text shape and the
stroke. And the picture should now look like this:
Now
CTRL+CLICK on the
stoke layer's thumbnail. This will select the white outline (stroke). If you look closely, you'll notice some unwanted artifacts in the outline and to remove them, we simply need to select the outline and fill it with white color. We've already done the selection part, it's time to fill, so press
ALT+BACKSPACE to do it. You can now deselect (
CTRL+D) and the outline should be a little smoother. The next part is probably going to be a little fictional :) We will create a shadow. I'm not sure if a very clear glass can cast a shadow, but let's imagine it can. Here's where our hidden layer comes in: create a new layer below the
stroke and name it
shadow. Now
CTRL+CLICK on the
text shape layer's thumbnail and select
shadow layer. Press D to default color values and
ALT+BACKSPACE to fill the selection with foreground color (in this case it will be black). Deselect (
CTRL+D). Now go to
Filter > Blur > Gaussian Blur ... and apply a 4 pixel blur. Then press
CTRL+T and, once again, holding the
CTRL key, drag the corner handles to make the following shape:
Set the shadow's opacity to 20%-30% (whatever looks best). Create a new layer on top of all others and call it
reflection. We will need something for the glass to reflect so let's imagine it will reflect a room. That means we need a picture of a room. I've used
this one from
sxc.hu website. Open it in Photoshop, paste on the document and resize to fit. I've also flipped the room horizontally (
Edit > Transform > Flip Horizontal). Decrease the opacity a little so that you could see the text outline through:
Since there's no highlights on the X letter, i've decided to add some. I grabbed the clone tool

from the
tools palette and, using a soft partially transparent brush, cloned some highlights from the letter F to the X:
You can now change the opacity of the
reflection to 100%. With
reflection layer selected,
CTRL+CLICK the hidden
text shape layer to load its selection. We only need to leave the reflection on the text and dispose of everything else. So far we have the text selected and hitting
DEL would do exactly the opposite. That's why we need to press
CTRL+SHIFT+I to invert the selection. Now we can press
DEL and watch all the unnecessary parts go away:
So far this is not a good reflection and we need to tweak it a little. We need to make our glass reflect only the lightest parts of the reflection texture. That's where levels adjustments come in: press
CTRL+L to bring up levels dialog. Now drag the middle slider to the right until you reach a decent result like the one below. You can also play with the left slider as well too. This operation will darken the shadows and midtones and only the highlights will remain intact. That's how your texture should look after the levels adjustment:
Now change the
reflection's blending mode to
lighten and set its opacity to about 20%. And here's how it looks like now:
Select the
stroke layer and grab the burn tool

from the
tools palette. Set its exposure to a lower than 10% number and range to
highlights. Also pick a small soft brush:
Burn some areas of the outline to make it look less plain. This is a minor tweak and you would probably not notice any difference without looking into both images at the same time to compare. Here's how mine looks:
As i've mentioned, not much of a difference from the original, but we'll tweak this a little by decreasing the intensity of the whole outline. Press
CTRL+U to open hue/saturation dialog and drag the
lightness slider to the left until the value is about -30. And now there's a little bit more contrast original and burned areas, thus resulting in more detail:
One last thing we might do is add an aditional reflection. This is an optional part: some of you might like the result as it is now, some as it will become after adding an additional highlight so let's give you a chance to decide. Create a new layer on top of everything and name it
highlight. Draw a selection with an elliptical marquee tool

from the
tools palette:
Now pick the gradient tool

from the
tools palette, press D and X on your keyboard (default color values and exchange them) and use the following settings for the gradient:
Draw a gradient from top to bottom like so:

Deselect the gradient with
CTRL+D. Now press
CTRL+T and with the
CTRL key pressed, distort the gradient like this:
CTRL+CLICK the hidden
text shape layer to load its selection, press
CTRL+SHIFT+I to invert and
DEL to delete the unneeded parts of the gradient. Lower the opacity of the gradient to about 60%-70% and you'll have a final result. So let's compare the two results:

Without additional highlight

With an additional highlight
Use the one you like best. Hope you liked this tutorial, see you next time :)