Saturday, November 15, 2008

The Unwanted Guest



A couple of years ago my daughter asked me if I could remove a person from a picture she had and make a 5 x 7 print of the result. I looked at it and told her I'd give it a try, not really expecting to accomplish much. The pictures above show the original picture and the progression to the final result. Click on any one of them to open a larger view for more detail.

The original as seen in the upper left photo has the boy she wanted removed at the left. The other three were hockey players. The two boys, the one on the right is my grandson, Rick, played on the same team. The girl, my granddaughter, Nicole, was also a player but on a different team.
I decided that I wanted to change the background to fit the hockey theme so it was best just to simply cut out the three players and discard the rest of the picture. The second picture shows the resulting cutout layer. Copy and clone work removed the hand in the center and constructed both of the shoulders of the boy on the left. I used the clone stamp to construct the boy's left shoulder and remove the hand in the center. I then copied the left shoulder, flipped it horizontally, and placed it to create the right shoulder. The shadows and highlights were then modified so the shoulder didn't appear to a copy. The third picture shows this completed work.
The final operation was to add the background. A separate picture of the hockey rink was added as a separate layer, defocusing it with the Blur filter and adjusting the size for the correct perspective. Afterward I felt I needed to add the additional hand on the right shoulder so I copied Nicole's left hand, flipped it horizontally, and placed it on the constructed right shoulder. The final picture shows the completed project.
My daughter now has it on her wall with all of her other hockey pictures.





Tuesday, September 2, 2008

A Subtle Edit

Sometimes editing isn't a grand change in a photo such as adding or removing parts or combining pictures but more to place more emphasis on the subject by separating it from the background. This is commonly done by making the background out of focus but can also be done by changing the exposure of the subject from that of the background. In the 2 examples shown below the topary dog in the original picture almost blends into the background. Selecting the dog using the Quick Selection Tool and the Selection Brush Tool I was able to change the its brightness with the Enhance / Lighting tools making it stand out from the background. Other methods could have been used but I chose this one because I could easily vary the brightness to what I wanted.


Original
Edited

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Special Panorama

This is one of my latest photo creation project. I was at the EPCOT flower show and wanted to get a panoramic photo of the waterway with the monorail going by. The problem was that I couldn't get a wide enough shot from the only vantage point available to me. I had to do it in 4 shots, 3 to create the panorama and 1 to catch the monorail train. The monorail train had to be cut out of it's picture and copied to the panorama as a layer. The panorama then had to be layered to fit the monorail train on the monorail track and behind the trees. Below is the completed picture.




These are the pictures I created it from.