7 Creative Ways to Use Topaz Star Effects in Your Photos
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Enhance Specular Highlights on Jewelry
- Add small, sharp stars to metal edges and gemstone facets to simulate strong catchlights. Use a tight star size and single-point placement (paint a tiny white dot on a separate layer) so it reads as a realistic sparkle.
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Turn Streetlights Into Cinematic Flares
- Apply wider, softer star shapes to streetlights and traffic lights at night to create a moody, cinematic look. Lower the opacity and blend mode (Screen/Lighten) to avoid overpowering the scene.
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Accent Holiday Lights and Bokeh
- Convert round bokeh or string lights into starbursts for festive photos. Use multi-point star presets with warmer color tint and reduce intensity for a natural holiday glow.
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Create Sunstar Effects for Landscapes
- Add convincing sunstars where the sun peeks between objects (trees, buildings). Use longer ray lengths, subtle diffusion, and match color temperature to the scene for believability.
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Add Subtle Glints to Eyes
- Place tiny two- or three-point stars on eye catchlights to draw focus in portraits. Keep scale minimal and blend so the star enhances the gaze without looking stylized.
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Simulate Lens Flares on Product Shots
- Carefully place elongated or multi-point stars along specular reflections in product photography to imply luxury and high polish. Mask or paint stars only where reflections naturally occur.
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Create Magical or Fantasy Effects
- Combine colored stars, varied sizes, and layered opacity to add floating sparkles around subjects (e.g., fairytale portraits, fantasy composites). Use a black layer with painted white spots to place stars precisely, then apply Star Effects and blend.
Tip (workflow): For precise placement, create a separate layer, paint tiny white dots where you want stars, run Topaz Star Effects on that layer, then set the layer blend mode to Screen/Lighten and adjust opacity and masking.
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