If you don't know much about art in the 60s, using the Andy Warhol effect on pictures will help you learn. Feel super connected to the 60s? Express it with an Andy Warhol pop art filter! The beauty of art is that it instantly transports people to a particular era. We get you might be thinking, Sure, pop art effects are cool and all, but why use them in the first place? Great question! Unless you're straight up looking to make Andy Warhol pictures, we'll speak to those with curiously raised eyebrows. Want more on making the best collage ever? Read: Aesthetic Collage Ideas
Just wanna create one image? No problem! Just open one of our regular blank canvases instead of a collage and get to Warholing!
Or click Share and light up one of your social accounts with the new look!
When you're all done, click Download on the top toolbar to download as a JPG, PNG, or PDF ( PicMonkey Pro feature). Change the colors of your pop art filter each time you apply it. Replace a cell background with your image.Īpply the Warhol effect (in the Effects tab on the left menu).Īdjust your overall look using the Brightness, Contrast, and Fade sliders. This resulted in wholly unique works of (pop) art. Famed pop artists like Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, and James Rosenquist celebrated the common things, whether they were people, objects, ideas, etc. If you're new to pop art, think of it as blurring the lines between traditional "high art" themes and everyday life. Indeed, many early works stemmed from post-WWII manufacturing and an ever-growing media presence. The idea behind the "pop" was that it drew from mass media and pop-ular culture.
Pop art began as a massively popular art movement in the 1950s and 60s.
Here's the lowdown on PicMonkey's one-of-a-kind pop art effects and how to achieve this classic look in PicMonkey. Use our pop art filter (known in PicMonkey as the Warhol effect) and make all your friends say, “Yes, in fact I did win this at a fancy auction.” Did you know you can whip up a pop art masterpiece in a coupla minutes with PicMonkey? Go all Andy Warhol with a checkered, multi-colored design complete with enough colors to give the ’60s a run for their money.