FLYPAPER TEXTURES

Classic Grunge and Painterly Textures

FLYPAPER TEXTURES

Classic Grunge and Painterly Textures

FLYPAPER TEXTURES

Fine textures for Art and Photography

FLYPAPER TEXTURES

Fine textures for Art and Photography

FLYPAPER TEXTURES

Fine textures for Art and Photography

FLYPAPER TEXTURES

Classic grunge and painterly texture layers for all your photographic and illustrative needs.

Flypaper Textures are owned by photographic artists Paul Grand based in France and Jill Ferry, a photographer from New Zealand. Both are successful book cover photo-illustrators with hundreds of book covers in their portfolios.

Together they have been creating and selling world-class textures and overlays for photographers, designers and artists since 2009.

A twelve-year collaboration with Dr Russel Brown of Adobe, birthed a free Texture app that is used with Photoshop for the easy application of all Flypaper products.

Their high-quality and unique textures and overlays are perfect for adding depth and atmosphere to all your photography and design projects.

FLYPAPER TUTORIALS

Flooded River Saone

Flooded River Saone

Up here in eastern France we’ve had a very soggy winter, warmer than usual but also much wetter and because of all that rain we’ve not had much chance of getting fresh images, but on Sunday we had a rare golden hour when I captured some lovely floodscapes on a very flooded River Saone.
Shot from an ancient raised Roman road above the flooded farmfields, these trees are normally overgrown hedgerow tops and not the banks of a huge lake!

Roses

Roses

Thought it was time for some more roses to brighten up the blog pages. These are my old favourites Cecile Brunner which are looking particularly beautiful in the garden at the moment, I simply added an old open book et voila!

Tree Sunrise

Tree Sunrise

  Recently Jill pointed out I'd not done a blog entry for months! So here it is, my mea culpa blog! But I must also quickly add that I've not been lying on my laurels, I've been doing loads backstage and this will shortly become evident with new flypaper projects...