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Welcome To MyFreeWebTemplates.info Photoshop Tutorials Area - Two Chairs
Photoshop Two Chairs Tutorial.
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In tutorial
3, I showed you how we could transform a digital photograph into
something that felt like a hand-drawn and hand-painted illustration.
In this column I will show you something quite different. We will
retain some of the photo-realistic feel of the original photograph,
while adding a degree of movement and mystery to the final
image.
We will start with an image of two folding chairs that
I photographed in a restored plantation called Pedro St. James on
Grand Cayman Island in the Caribbean. See Figure
1.
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| Figure 1 |
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I shot this
photograph with Fuji Sensia 100 film and scanned the resulting color
slide with my Minolta desktop filmscanner. This produced a file of
around 20MB after converting to 8 bit color (the scanner produces
scans in 16 bit color, with the file twice as large, but most of the
manipulations I do in Photoshop work only on 8 bit files, so I have
to lose that extra precision).
I liked the feeling of this
picture, of two absent people who had been sitting companionably
together in these chairs. I placed the chairs close together to
emphasize this feeling.
I also liked the interplay of light
and shadow on the wall behind the chairs. It gives a sort of
nostalgic feel of the lateness of the day. And I also liked the bits
of leaves that are scattered about the wooden deck. This gives the
feel that this scene has been here for a while, neglected, with a
sense of time passing.
I wanted to manipulate the image to
emphasize these qualities and to give it a magical
feel.
First I made a duplicate layer in Photoshop, using
Layer>Duplicate Layer. I applied a Gaussian blur to this layer,
with a medium to large blur radius. The blur radius to use depends
in part on the pixel dimensions of your image, so you can experiment
with this setting. Then I applied Edit>Transform>Scale to the
blurred layer, to stretch it out in all directions so that the
blurred subject was slightly larger than the unblurred
subject.
Then I set the opacity of the blurred layer to 65
percent. You can see the effect of this in Figure 2. There is a
softening effect, and you can see a halo around the chairs and the
wooden panels of the deck.
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| Figure 2 |
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These
manipulations, of creating a slightly enlarged blurred layer and
blending it with the original image, are inspired by Freeman
Patterson and Andre Gallant's book Photo Impressionism and the
Subjective Image. In that book, the authors describe the
technique of slide montages, in which you photograph the same
subject two or more times on color slide film, with one or two of
the exposures taken out of focus (blurred) and slightly zoomed in or
out or slightly off center. Then the multiple slides are sandwitched
to create the final image. Here we have done a very similar thing in
Photoshop, using layers to blend the blurred and unblurred image,
instead of different sandwitched slides.
Then I applied the
filter Distort>Diffuse Glow to the blurred layer, with a purple
color. Be sure to set the grain to zero in the Diffuse Glow filter,
and set the Amount somewhere in the middle, around 5. If the effect
is too strong, you can always undo and try again with a lesser
amount, or just do Filter>Fade to fade out some of the effect.
This basically made all the light areas of the image purple, which
was not the final color I wanted. But I did want to retain a tinge
of purple to add some interest and mystery to the shadows.
So
then in Image>Adjust> Hue/Saturation I selected magenta and
moved this purple color to a muted yellow color. The Hue/Saturation
tool did not select all of the purple glow, leaving a slight purple
tinge to the shadows, as desired. I like the effect of the shadows
having a slight purplish tone and the highlights having a warm
yellowish beige tone. It strengthens the feeling of lateness of the
day.
But this step removed too much of the dappled lighting
effect from the back wall. So using the history brush I selected an
earlier state of the image, namely that in Figure 2, and set the
brush to a very low opacity, around 30%, and set the blending mode
to lighten. Then I painted over some of the highlights. It is a
subtle effect but gives a lot more life to the image. You can see
the results so far in Figure 3.
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| Figure 3 |
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The history
brush in Photoshop works as follows. Photoshop keeps a history of
the past several states of the image (this is true only of the full
version of Photoshop, not the free versions that come with some
scanners and digital cameras). The history brush lets you select one
of these history states, and then when you paint with the brush you
are actually painting with pixels taken from the history state you
selected. This is an easy way to selectively merge two states of an
image. You use the brush to paint over just those areas where you
want to make this merge. You can change the opacity of the brush to
increase or decrease the effect. This is a fun brush to experiment
with, especially after you have made some dramatic color changes to
the image, as we have done here.
I wanted to increase the
contrast and color of the image, so I tried using
Image>Adjust>Curves on the top layer (the blurred layer). I
pulled down the curve to darken this layer. Then I changed the
blending mode of the layer to lighten. Sometimes it is difficult to
predict the results you will get from these manipulations and with
the layer blending modes. You just have to try different things
until you start to learn what to expect from which
tools.
Next I flattened the image. Using
Edit>Transform>Skew, I straightened the lines of the image.
You can see the results so far in Figure
4.
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| Figure 4 |
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To give the
image a final ghostlike quality, I used Filter>Distort>Pinch
with a value of 25. The pinch filter pinches the center of the
image, shrinking it relative to the rest of the image. The setting
of 25 is a medium setting, because I didn't want a really strong
distorting effect. Then I used Filter>Fade to blend the pinched
image with the unpinched version of the image. I also used
Image>Replace Color to darken the shadows on the far wall. The
result, shown in Figure 5, gives the feeling that the chairs have
been recently moved by the departure of their occupants. This
happens because pinch effects primarily the center of the image,
where the chairs are, and not the wall behind or the wooden deck in
front. So only the chairs appear to be in motion, against a
stationary background. You can almost feel the absent occupants of
the chairs, as their motion in conversing with each other and then
finally leaving the scene moves the position of the chairs
slightly. |
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| Figure 5 |
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If you
compare the original image with the final result, you can see that
we transformed a quite literal image to a mysterious one that
suggests missing actors and a piece of a
story. |
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