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Welcome To MyFreeWebTemplates.info Photoshop Tutorials Area - California Poppies
Photoshop California Poppies Tutorial.
Tutorial 1:
California Poppies
With
today’s digital cameras, scanners, software, and desktop printers,
anyone can edit photographs make nice prints of their snapshots. But
we can do much more than that. Here I will talk about how with a bit
of imagination you can turn a photograph into a work of
art.
The tools we will use enable great artistic freedom in
the design and creation of the final image. You can try out
different things and then undo them and try again. You can create
multiple versions of the same image, with different effects (I
usually do!). This is a freedom that does not exist with traditional
artistic media.
You can start with either a film camera or
digital camera. With the film camera there is the additional step of
having to scan your picture. I use both digital and film cameras.
The picture we will work with here started out as a 35mm color slide
on Fuji Provia 100 film. It is a field of Califorrnia poppies
captured last spring near my home in California. The California
poppy is the state flower of California.
Figure 1 shows the
scan I took of the color slide. The scan was made using my Minolta
Dimage Scan Speed slide scanner. It is an older scanner, around 2 or
3 years old. The scan is at 2400 dpi, and the scanner does not give
you a lot of control over the scan exposure. Even if the scanner
software gives you control, it is generally applied after the scan,
to the scanned image. So you may as well do such fixes in Photoshop
because you get much better control. Figure 1 shows the scan after I
made adjustments in Photoshop for color and brightness to match the
slide as closely as possible. You can make these adjustments in any
image editing software, even the most
inexpensive. |
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| Figure 1 |
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For doing
the kinds of artistic manipulation we will do here, you do not need
to get the most expensive or fanciest scanner. That is because the
manipulations we will do will smooth out imperfections in the scan
and will actually remove detail: we are aiming at a painterly effect
rather than for photo realism! There are a few inexpensive desktop
slide scanner models available. Some desktop flatbed scanners come
with or have optional slide scanner attachments. If you have a
flatbed scanner, you could even start with a scan of a color print.
Or, if you do not want to do your own scans, some photo finishing
stores will scan slides or negatives for you very
inexpensively.
This image in Figure 1, while attractive,
looks too literal for me. I find the amount of detail in the
foreground foliage distracting from the subject of the picture,
which is the poppy blossoms. Plus there are ugly black blotches and
other distracting artifacts in the background. So I decided to
soften the image by using a painting program. Figure 2 shows the
results of painting over the image in Painter Classic using the
water brush in the "just add water" mode. I got Painter Classic free
with my Wacom tablet a few years ago. It is an old, limited version
of Painter, and all I use it for is the "just add water" brush. This
brush has the effect of adding a wash over your picture. You can
choose the brush size. If you choose too big a brush, you just end
up creating a big blur. Just like adding water to a watercolor
painting, too big a brush is like adding too much water and causing
all the colors to run together. Instead, choose a small enough brush
to retain some detail, yet large enough that you can paint the
entire picture in a reasonable amount of time. You want your brush
strokes to mimic the content of the picture. In my case, since the
poppies are blowing in the wind at an angle, I made my brush stokes
follow this angle. I also wanted to smooth out the background, so I
used a bigger brush there. Notice how I also got rid of the large
black sections that were in the
background. |
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| Figure 2 |
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A pen input
device is indispensable for this kind of detailed work. If you tried
to do this with a mouse, you would not have enough control, and the
resulting picture would be noticeably poorer quality. You can
purchase the cordless pens and tablets quite inexpensively, and they
come with fun software not only for painting but for distorting and
manipulating the picture. If you buy a tablet, get one of the
smaller sizes. The larger ones just take up a lot of desk space, and
they are actually more trouble to use, since you have to cover a
much larger area with your drawing hand for the same picture size.
With the smaller tablet your hand motions can be more economical.
The feel is exactly like drawing on paper. The tablets are pressure
sensitive so that you can control the effects by how hard you press.
I like my tablet so much that I bought the smallest one available (a
Wacom Graphire 4"x5") for my laptop so that I can take it with me
when I travel.
Figure 2 looks like a watercolor painting.
Note how in addition to the smooth, dreamlike quality there is also
a loss of detail and a muted contrast. But I wanted a bit more
detail than a watercolor can provide, and I wanted a brightness
range similar to the original slide. So I some adjustments to Figure
2 in Photoshop. I darkened the image and increased its saturation
and contrast. Again, these adjustments can be made in any image
editing software. But I still wanted to add back some detail. I can
get this detail from the original image (Figure 1).
To do
this, I opened both Figure 1 and Figure 2 in Photoshop. Selecting
the "move" tool and holding down the shift key, I dragged Figure 1
onto Figure 2. That puts the original photograph as a layer on top
of the watercolored image. (Holding down the shift key when you make
this move ensures that the two layers will be perfectly centered on
each other.) Now what I wanted was to blend these two images
together. You can experiment with the opacity of the layers and the
blending modes to get the effect you like. I chose the "multiply"
blending mode with an opacity of 35%, and I also greatly lightened
the top layer (Figure 1) and very slightly lightened the bottom
image (the watercolor image) using "curves." Otherwise, using the
multiply mode would result in too dark an image. Doing this I was
able to add just a bit of detail back into the watercolor from the
original photograph. You can see in Figure 3 that the added detail
is in the foreground foliage and the poppy blossoms, but the
background is still nice and smooth. Even with this added detail,
there is not so much detail that you lose the painterly feel. At
this point I flattened the image, which merges the two layers into
one. |
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| Figure 3 |
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Next I
wanted to adjust the color. There are many ways of doing this, but
my favorite is the channel mixer. This is the most difficult to
become adept at, so you just have to experiment. The channel mixer
allows you to mix the information from different color channels
(red, green, blue). You can look at each of the three channels
separately to get an idea of what will happen when you mix them.
What I did was to increase the red channel by adding some of the
green channel to it, thereby intensifying the color of the poppies,
and then I intensified the greens by adding some of the blue channel
to it. I also wanted to add some contrast to the picture and tone
down its intensity somewhat, so I used the color balance tool to add
some blue to the shadows and a bit of red to the highlights. You can
see the results in Figure 4. Another, perhaps easier way, to make
color adjustments is with the hue/saturation tool. There you can
select one of six colors, and using a slider you can adjust its hue.
There are even controls to broaden or narrow the range of color that
is adjusted with each slider. This is a very powerful tool. You can
achieve somewhat different effects using each tool, so it is partly
a matter of taste and partly a matter of which you feel more
comfortable with. Don’t expect to get it right the first time. With
some practice, you will be able to get predictable
results. |
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| Figure 4 |
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If you
compare the original with the final image, you can see that we took
a rather ordinary image and made it into a piece of
art! |
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