Noupe Editorial Team September 29th, 2020

Faster than Light – Neon effect in Photoshop & The Most Eye-Catching Examples

Using the neon effect in Photoshop may sound a little too simplistic for experienced Photoshop users but the effect it can have on your design is certainly not so simple. This fun design effect turns the design process into an experimental and vibey journey. 

The neon effect has a variety of different application methods and can be found in almost any type of visual. Whether it’s a website banner, printable material, or a billboard, it always manages to catch our eye and emphasize the impact of the message of the design. 

Playing with electric, glowing lights while making it look realistic is tricky especially for novice designers. The great majority of designers tend to sweat when it comes to transforming texts and shapes using neon effects in Photoshop. 

To give you a better perspective of the real neon effect, let’s dive into the background of neon signages for a bit.

Quite surprising but primitive examples of neon signs actually date back to the 1670s. Before the actual age of electricity, a French astronomer named Jean Picard noticed a faded glow in a glass mercury barometer tube. After Picard shook the glass tube, he observed a glow resulting from static electricity.

About two centuries later, in 1857, the German glassblower and physicist Heinrich Geissler began his experiments using sealed glass tubes with two electrodes and tried to pass an electric current through the glass to make the gas in the tube glow. The color of the electrical discharge was changing depending on the type of gas and the material of the glass tube. 

With the first neon glow discovered years ago, we started to see neon effects everywhere. As the business owners and advertisers have begun to realize the immense potential of the neon effect, soon after, every kind of business including arcades, restaurants, and movie theaters has modified their signs to electric neon ones to attract the attention of passersby.

Just like the power of its usage in real-life signs, using neon effects in Photoshop is also destined to revive your designs with creative color schemes and lights.

That is why we want to showcase the most eye-catching examples of neon effects in Photoshop that will inspire your work while teaching you new techniques.

The Most Eye-Catching Neon Effects in Photoshop

neon effect pizza
Design by Parham Marandi on dribbble
neon effect font
Design by Fonts on dribbble
neon effect motel
Design by Jace on dribbble
holo neon effect
Design by Raul Taciu on dribbble
girl in neon effect
Design by Yuliia Dobrokhod on dribbble
neon effect hands
by Yup Nguyen
neon signs
Design by Anton Borzenkov on dribbble
arcade neon effect sign
Design by Roberto Perrino on dribbble
bike in neon effect
Design by Tribhuvan Suthar on dribbble
Lonely robot in the city neon effect
Design by Pixel Point on dribbble
neon effect
Design by Jona Dinges on dribbble
neon effect font
Design by Viet Huynh on dribbble
eye in neon effect
Design by BestServedBold on dribbble
Walk Cycle neon effect
Design by Yup Nguyen on dribbble

Wrapping it up

We can’t get enough of these glowing neon effects. We hope you feel the same way and these designs give you some inspiration to get experimenting with the neon effects in Photoshop. The neon effect is one of the techniques that was designed to catch the eye of your customers. Now you have seen some of the best neon effects in action, try it out for yourself, and have fun designing!

Noupe Editorial Team

The jungle is alive: Be it a collaboration between two or more authors or an article by an author not contributing regularly. In these cases you find the Noupe Editorial Team as the ones who made it. Guest authors get their own little bio boxes below the article, so watch out for these.

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