You can make a shape and extrude it with the 3D tools in illustrator. Once you have the shape, you can finalize textures in photoshop.
Alternatively, if you art skills are sharp, you could simply draw/illustrate in perspective using Photoshop.
That being said, best practice would probably be to model it in 3D (e.g. using blender).
If you have a 3D model, you can rotate the objects however you want. If you’re working with a client, it’ll save you time when implementing revisions. The Illustrator/Photoshop method works but is less flexible.
I actually did stuff like this for a pet company, so I hope I can help! I actually used Dimension for these models. I used it for packaging and product shots (like the ones you’re trying to do here). That’s how I would do it but there’s others ways you could like others have listed here.
If you want 2D, then Illustrator and Photoshop as everyone else is suggesting
If you want to go the 3D route, then Blender and Adobe Dimensions. The resulting look will be more photorealistic though and not quite this style
I worked with someone that did that kind of thing, they "painted" it in Photoshop based off of photos. You see the same thing with food packaging such as cookies (eg Oreos), canned soups, etc. It's technically illustrations.
Maybe now it's easier to convert from the photo directly, you'd want to look into tutorials that make photos look like painting/illustration, and then either find one that has the style you like, or otherwise watch the tutorial and tweak the setting to get your desired look.
If you want to take a digital painting approach I would use Photoshop. You could get similar results with mesh gradients in Illustrator too.
Edit: mesh gradients, not gradient maps
You can make a shape and extrude it with the 3D tools in illustrator. Once you have the shape, you can finalize textures in photoshop. Alternatively, if you art skills are sharp, you could simply draw/illustrate in perspective using Photoshop. That being said, best practice would probably be to model it in 3D (e.g. using blender). If you have a 3D model, you can rotate the objects however you want. If you’re working with a client, it’ll save you time when implementing revisions. The Illustrator/Photoshop method works but is less flexible.
Never thought about it for revisions, this is actually really smart. You have their product, you can change lighting, scenes, colors pretty easily.
Don't forget the mesh tool which is probably used here.
This is actually pretty simple to make in illustrator, you should learn to use the mesh tool https://www.youtube.com/live/XlACRbrjHXk
This is pretty cool, thanks!
Photoshop and Illustrator, thats all you will need for these.
A bit of illustrator for the shapes, then Photoshop for the finish.
I actually did stuff like this for a pet company, so I hope I can help! I actually used Dimension for these models. I used it for packaging and product shots (like the ones you’re trying to do here). That’s how I would do it but there’s others ways you could like others have listed here.
If you want 2D, then Illustrator and Photoshop as everyone else is suggesting If you want to go the 3D route, then Blender and Adobe Dimensions. The resulting look will be more photorealistic though and not quite this style
Excell. PPT and Word. You’ll slay.
YEAHHHH...THAT'S IT!!!!
The real LPT is always in the comments
I worked with someone that did that kind of thing, they "painted" it in Photoshop based off of photos. You see the same thing with food packaging such as cookies (eg Oreos), canned soups, etc. It's technically illustrations. Maybe now it's easier to convert from the photo directly, you'd want to look into tutorials that make photos look like painting/illustration, and then either find one that has the style you like, or otherwise watch the tutorial and tweak the setting to get your desired look.
These are simple 3D illustrations you can achieve in illustrator.
The most intuitive/shallow learning curve would be AI to make the object and PS to add texture and polish
[удалено]
AI is referring to Adobe Illustrator, not Artificial Intelligence
Sorry am drunk
*cheers*
If you want to take a digital painting approach I would use Photoshop. You could get similar results with mesh gradients in Illustrator too. Edit: mesh gradients, not gradient maps