![]() Use the Marquee tool to select and move a few random sections of the image around, creating small ‘glitched-out’ gaps. It works best if you move them all a short distance in the same direction. Save this file as a PSD, then run Filters – Distort – Displace. It will open a file dialog without any explanation, but just select the PSD you just saved and click OK. ![]() Getting the values right depends on the type of image you’re moshing, but generally something like -100, 60 works well for a high-res image like this. Duplicate the moshed layer and run the filter again with different values until the effect is intense enough for your liking. I usually reverse the direction of the numbers (so in this case 80, -120 or something like that). I like to put the top layer on blending mode Multiply to get maximum glitches while still retaining a bit of the detail of the original image. If you’re going for the hacker look, desaturate the image, then crunch the blacks a bit more with the Levels or Contrast adjustments. ![]() To top it off, I pulled the original image through an ASCII art generator and pasted the result over the image. Fade the ASCII text into the image by adding a layer mask to it and painting black in the spots you want to erase (or just use the eraser tool).
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