Welcome to Digital Camera Magazine Community Sign in | Join | Help
Comments or questions about this site? Click here
 

Photoshop help for this picture

Last post 06-05-2008, 9:21 AM by KeithT. 8 replies.
Sort Posts: Previous Next
  •  29-04-2008, 9:01 PM 788528

    Photoshop help for this picture



    I love the way the light falls onto this statue of a pig (taken in Bath) - however I want to remove the background and create a kind of shadow effect like that that is around the pig! Any ideas as I'm a bit stuck.

    Thanks in advance
    Jules
    x

    My Gallery Please comment and leave suggestions, I'm learning and would like all the help you can give me. Thanks
  •  30-04-2008, 5:27 PM 789327 in reply to 788528

    Re: Photoshop help for this picture

        Good afternoon Jules

    Me no expert,maybe you could have a play about with the Spot Healing brush,and try to "bleed" the shades you want into the areas you want them,see the Guitar pic in my Gallery,thats how i did that.Just Alt Click on the area you want to bleed from,then brush it into the required place,might just get you thinking and cause you to find something else.

    bill stewardson

    "the best photographer in the world 12/13 May 07" bigbilly

    Big Bill's Gallery

    myspace.com/billstewardson
    photobilly.co.uk
  •  30-04-2008, 6:12 PM 789367 in reply to 789327

    Re: Photoshop help for this picture

    Not really sure what you mean about the shadows. Removing the b/g is pretty trivial.



    I just dropped a bullseye gradient on it but you could really paint in whatever you want.
    Kidography. It's like photography. But more fun.
  •  01-05-2008, 1:13 PM 789957 in reply to 789367

    Re: Photoshop help for this picture

    If you want the background darker you could also use the Burn tool (presuming you are in Photoshop).
    TBPITW 29-30 Mar 2008 and 9-10 Aug 2008

    DCM Gallery
  •  01-05-2008, 5:22 PM 790102 in reply to 789957

    Re: Photoshop help for this picture

        Hello from Breezey Sheffy.

    Errrmm,,,,think JRs effort wins the day.
    Thing with PS is,,,theres prolly 893 different ways to do everything,just gotta keep trying them till you find one your comfy with.

    bill stewardson

    "the best photographer in the world 12/13 May 07" bigbilly

    Big Bill's Gallery

    myspace.com/billstewardson
    photobilly.co.uk
  •  05-05-2008, 8:52 PM 792900 in reply to 788528

    Re: Photoshop help for this picture

    If this is what you mean, I drew round the pig and the base carefully with the polyganol lasso tool, went to Select and Inverse, then Image, Adjusments Brightness and Contrast and took out the brightness completely, and adjusted the contrast to how I wanted it to look.  When I use the polyganol tool I always set the Feather at 4 px.

    test shots





  •  05-05-2008, 9:48 PM 792946 in reply to 792900

    Re: Photoshop help for this picture

    Nice job Keith. Smile [:)]
    Paul
    My glass is 4/3rds full :)

    MY GALLERIES

  •  05-05-2008, 10:44 PM 793028 in reply to 792946

    Re: Photoshop help for this picture

    My only complaint with your method Keith, is that I feel it's too sudden, and thus doing it by burning leads to a more natural and gradual shadow.

     

     

    But then we dont know what the op wanted :p





    TBPITW 13-14th Sept 08


  •  06-05-2008, 9:21 AM 793198 in reply to 793028

    Re: Photoshop help for this picture

    The problem with burning in is that on enlarging (or especially printing) the image the background can sometimes look patchy.  Burning, or dodging is not, in my humble opinion, the best way to deal with large areas of deep shadow or light. But each to his own of course.  What ever way suits best.  I turned down the brightness fully, but you can turn it down gradually to achieve a softer grad between shadow and light.  I have used this technique for many art brochure shots in the past with great success. (see example below)

    Quay Arts Exhibition 2007

    Click on image to see larger version.





View as RSS news feed in XML