Because my camera ran out of batteries just as it was getting good (and the spare set was already at home on the charger, dangit). Plus I need to work on getting the exposure right with all that snow. :-P
~RCH~
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Practicing with textures
I recently paid $39 for a set of Photoshop actions and textures designed to give pictures a vintage look. I wouldn't say I got ripped off, exactly; its creator had no malice of intent and for someone less familiar with Photoshop, the set would be a big help. But I've been using the program for 10 years; I ran the set and thought, "That's it? I paid forty bucks for that?" I guess I expected something more advanced, something beyond my grasp. But it's not.
So I decided to practice creating my own. I made an action for a curves adjustment that gives a retro, cross-processed look (ish), then I warmed up the color and lowered the contrast on a photo of snow and gravel to use as my overlay texture. Obviously I need to keep practicing; I don't think anybody would pay money to learn my secret formula. But it's a start! :-)
Original photo (SOOC)
Nikon D70; 85mm prime lens; 1/800s at f/4.5; ISO 200
Photoshopped version
Curves and saturation adjustment layers; original texture added; texture masked out and lightened around the face
~RCH~
So I decided to practice creating my own. I made an action for a curves adjustment that gives a retro, cross-processed look (ish), then I warmed up the color and lowered the contrast on a photo of snow and gravel to use as my overlay texture. Obviously I need to keep practicing; I don't think anybody would pay money to learn my secret formula. But it's a start! :-)
Original photo (SOOC)
Nikon D70; 85mm prime lens; 1/800s at f/4.5; ISO 200
Photoshopped version
Curves and saturation adjustment layers; original texture added; texture masked out and lightened around the face
~RCH~
Thursday, January 1, 2009
Photoshop Portrait trick
I've got a favorite trick for making portraits pop: I run this Lomo action (by Addicted to Design) in Photoshop, copy the result, and then paste it over the original with either an Overlay, Soft Light, or Hard Light blending mode of between 20 - 35%. Check out the photos below for an example of the effect:
Original photo
Nikon D70; 85mm prime lens; 1/1600s at f/4.5; ISO 200
Photoshopped version
sky detail burned in with alternate exposure from RAW format; Lomo action; basic retouching on the face, particularly around the eyes
Occasionally the skin tones come out a little too yellow, but that can be managed by taking the blending mode down a notch or masking out the skin (either a little or completely) on the Lomo layer.
I just love how it makes the colors sing. :-)
~RCH~
Original photo
Nikon D70; 85mm prime lens; 1/1600s at f/4.5; ISO 200
Photoshopped version
sky detail burned in with alternate exposure from RAW format; Lomo action; basic retouching on the face, particularly around the eyes
Occasionally the skin tones come out a little too yellow, but that can be managed by taking the blending mode down a notch or masking out the skin (either a little or completely) on the Lomo layer.
I just love how it makes the colors sing. :-)
~RCH~
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