Showing posts with label PHOTO SHOP TUTORIAL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PHOTO SHOP TUTORIAL. Show all posts

Friday, 16 August 2013

Posted by Unknown On Friday, August 16, 2013
Open the 2 images (The image that you want to change color in and the image of the target color that you want to achieve)


Do a selection of the part/s of the cloth on the image you want to change, I used the pen tool for all my selections.
I put a feather radius of 1 pixel to the selection.






Now you have only 2 options to colorise the cloth of the model.
1:Hue/Saturation.
2:Match color.
You can try either method here; sometimes one will give a better result than the other, depending on the image.


With your selection active click on the hue/saturation adjustment layer in the layers panel.


Now that you have the hue/saturation dialog box active, try adjusting the sliders until you achieve the color that you are looking for.


Here is my image before and after using Hue/Saturation:


Match Color:
Do a selection of the highlights,midtones and shadows on the reference image.


duplicate the background layer of your image,load the selection with the feather then go to image>adjustment>match color.


Make sure that `use selection in source to calculate colors` and use selection in target to calculate adjustment` is ticked.Select your reference image as source.

Finally you add an S curve to the selection then sets its blend mode to luminosity.


You can go even further to get the color as close as the reference by using curves on either the Hue/saturation method, or the match color method.

Hopefully, I've given you an idea of the basic techniques required when altering color values within your image.

Normally after that stage I compare the midtones, highlights and shadow values for both images. With practice, the technique becomes easier!

Here are the results of my final image using hue/saturation and match color:

Posted by Unknown On Friday, August 16, 2013
STEP 12
I could stop here with metamorphosis, butI thought I'd give her kitty ears. :D
So I found a suitable source, used a mask to cut the ears out. I don't bother keeping fur when masking, I just add it later. There are a couple of excellent tutorials on fur on Worth, so I won't go into detail here, I'll just say that I used a combination of Smudge Tool and painting, both with a hair brush.
Now, that her ears are nice and fluffy, I need to adjust the colour. Exposure make the ears nice and bright, Color Balance (Normal blending mode) took care of general colouring. I didn't like the colour of the skin inside the ears, so I used Levels, Screen mode to lighten it up, and make it soft pink. Finally, I painted some colour variations on a separate Color layer with a hair brush.

STEP 13
Accessorizing - YAY! :D I decided to go with some face and hair decorations. I used a bunch of rhinestones for the face and plastic flowers for the hair. Of course, they need some shading, slightly increased Exposure, and glow on a separate layer. I also added a little colour to her eyebrows and eyelashes to match the hair (Color layer). And, of course, I couldn't resist the urge to sprinkle some glitter around the eyes and on the lips. ;)

STEP 14
Almost done. Some final tweaks left.
Use Levels to darken her right human ear, so it's not visible.
Her left eyebrow has a weird angular shadow closer to the nose bridge, so I used Levels and a tiny (about 2 px) brush, pressure opacity, to lighten the area and fix that.
And shrink her left shoulder to make the body look much smaller.


STEP 15
Finally, I want to enhance her eyes, lips and hair. Make a stamp layer, then go to Filter - Other - High Pass, choose a low value, just when you can see fine embossed lines. Turn the High Pass layer to Vivid Light, decrease opacity to about 75%. Add mask to hide all, paint to reveal the eyes and lips, sparingly reveal some hair.
All done! :)

Posted by Unknown On Friday, August 16, 2013
And now we have to fix the neck. Again, duplicate the affected area from the stamp layer, use Distort to match the edges. Blend.


Finally, make another stamp layer, then soften the angles of the chin, and make the mouth a little more pouty with Liquify.

STEP 7
Now I don't really like those deep shadows under her eyes and on the side of the nose, so I'm going to lighten them with Levels, Lighten blending mode. I use a tiny brush (2-3px) to carefully lighten the pixels while zoomed in extremely.

STEP 8
Next, I want to give her shiny lips.
Create a Curves layer, Screen blending mode, and paint glitter with a scattered brush of your choice, then paint gloss with a plain semi-transparent brush.
Next, duplicate the latest stamp layer, apply lower value Surface Blur, and desaturate the layer. Apply Plastic Wrap (Filters - Artistic). Play with the sliders until wet look is achieved. Change the blending mode of the layer to Vivid Light, reduce the opacity to your liking. Make a Hide All layer mask, and reveal the lips.


STEP 9
Let's enhance the eyes.
I usually start with Exposure adjustment layer (irises only, naturally, so use a mask), Overlay blending mode. Then I add Color Balance (as a clipping mask), Color blending mode. And to top it off, let's add some flecks with opaque white brush on a new layer, Overlay mode.


STEP 10
Time to paint some colourful make-up on a new Color layer.

STEP 11
And now we're going to change hair colour to something more interesting than black. ;)
First, I painted new colour on a Color layer, added colour variations for shadows and highlights.

Looks a bit dull, so I enhanced the highlights with a Levels layer, and to spice it up I added some really bright tiny highlights for that "wispy" look.

To achieve that, I created a new Screen layer, with 75% opacity, then painted with a brush with following settings: spacing 60%, Size Jitter 100%, Pen Pressure. Add Outer Glow to the layer, my settings were: Opacity 75%, colour white, Size 5 px, Spread 0%, Range 31%, Anti-aliased.

Posted by Unknown On Friday, August 16, 2013
This is a tutorial on how I turned delightful Christina Ricci into an anime-style character for my entry Kawaii!.


STEP 1
The first thing to do is to find a high-res image. The larger, the better. I like mine to be over 2272x1704.

STEP 2
Duplicate your source, and shrink it, that'll be the base for the image. Do not discard the original as we'll be cutting out bits and pieces out of it in the next steps.

STEP 3
Now cut the eyes from the original and place them on the smaller image, adjust the positioning. I usually drop the opacity of the eyes layer and join the inner eye corners together. Blend the eyes well. I use a speckled brush with opacity set to pressure, then apply a lower value Gaussian Blur. It can take a lot of time, so you'd better stock up on patience. ;)


Looks like I lost a part of her eyebrow due to the size difference. ;) So I'll just copy that part from the original, scale it down and blend it, change the layer blending mode to Darken.

STEP 4
Next, duplicate the nose area and shrink it. Place this layer under the eyes layer and adjust the positioning - I usually use the philtrum for guides. Because of the new size, the nose has to be rotated clockwise just a little (for this particular image), which caused the nostrils to look a bit uneven. I used Liquify to correct that.

STEP 5
Time to adjust the chin.
First, duplicate the lower part of the face with the neck and move it up.
Second, duplicate the base image (from Step 2) and use Liquify on the cheekbones to fit the layer with the chin.
Third, duplicate the mouth area, scale it down and blend all the layers together.

STEP 6
Now, her face looks too wide, we need to address that.
Make a stamp layer (Shift+Ctrl+Alt+E).
Duplicate the left side of her face and chin and move it to the right and slightly up. Blend.