Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
I know we talked about doing a composite assignment and I found a site on FB that has some cute overlays to help us get started. They are cheap and I emailed the owner of the site and asked permission to copy and paste her instructions here in working with composites. I figured it is a place to start and maybe we should just jump in and help each other along the way.
First up....here is her website. I plan on working with the polar bear image and see what I come up with. I tried before with another image and it just looked stupid. I will post it in the comments for laughs.
http://capturedbycarriephotography.bigcartel.com/products
Second up....her instructions. These are more about how to use her overlays...which most of us know, but it is a start.
One high-resolution instant download of this Polar Bear on Hill Digital Background in a .jpg file format for personal or professional photographic and business use only.
Created in Adobe Photoshop.
Polar Bear on Hill photo by: Carrie Ann Grippo-Pike with © Captured By Carrie Photography & Product Shop
How to use a Digital Background:
A Digital Background is simply a digital image (.jpg) that can be used to enhance a portrait or create a certain scene or work of fine art that you are envisioning. It is a medium for you to insert elements you have taken in your own photos such as people, animals or objects. Most often a Digital Background is a photo of a scenic landscape, historic landmark or fantasy fairytale world.
One of the benefits of digital editing of images in Photoshop, is the ability to use these Digital Backgrounds/Scenery – putting a subject into/onto a scene completely different from the one you used when you took your image.
Instructions for use:
1. Load the images you want to work with on to your computer. You will need the Digital Background/Scenery that you want to use as well as a photo containing people, animals or objects that you would like to composite onto the Digital Background.
2. Open Photoshop. Select “File” from the menu and choose “Open.” In the dialog that now appears, locate the Digital Background image that you loaded in step one and open it.
3. Select “File” from the menu again and choose “Open” once more. The dialogue appears and this time locate the photograph(s) containing the elements that you want to add to the Digital Background image. For the purpose of this instruction list, an “element” is an object, person or animal in the photograph that you want to extract for use on the Digital Background.
4. To apply your elements to the Digital Background, drag, place, cut out or select all/copy/paste the elements (as a new layer) on top of the Digital Background you want to have them on.
5. In the Layers Palette, you can then change the pasted elements opacity amount, fill amount and blending mode to taste. The blending mode is the pull-down menu at the top of your Layers Palette (by default, it will read “Normal”). You may wish to blend in “Screen” mode prior to performing a free transform, simply to be able to see what you’re doing while you work.
6. To use Photoshop’s free transform tool, press CTRL + T (COMMAND + T for Mac users), then pull the small boxes found in each corner of your pasted elements with your mouse until your elements are where you want them to be within the Digital Background. You can also utilize free transform to move the elements around on your image, enlarge them, or shrink them. Hold down the “Shift” key when doing this to keep the elements to scale if you want them that way.
7. Position the elements on the Digital Background where you want them to go, including flipping them or rotating them. Add a Layer Mask, then using a soft black brush, paint away the elements to reveal objects underneath.
8. Once finished adding your elements to the Digital Background/Scenery, flatten your image. THEN you can treat/edit your photo with actions/presets or by hand so everything blends together as one overall, seamless piece and to give the image a finished look.
and finally...her note to me...
Hi Laurie!
Thank you so much for checking with me, and yes! Feel free to copy/paste my instructional notes into your Group! And please let me know if you or the other members have any questions about using it once you get going!
Thanks so much :-)
Carrie Ann
Now I know this is more about using overlays, but thought we could start here and post further instructions as we get deeper into this assignment. I plan on working on my assignment this week.
AS I FIND USEFUL TIPS, I WILL ADD HERE..
One thing that is important for a good composition is to match the color in all the images you are using for your composite. Here is something I found on doing that.
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For me, it is selection and blending into the scene. In this case, it was trying to mimic where the light would fall on Chance so that he looked more natural and not as much like a cut out.
Really nice DJ. Did you shoot the background?
Thanks, Anne. Yes, the background is one of my images.
Nice job DJ. Love that background and Chance is waiting for you so you can walk down that path together!
Thanks, Linda. This is a no dogs allowed area and so it was nice imagining Chance there with me.
That's a good composite and Chance is so cute! How'd you get his feet to blend with the grass. Did you use a blurring or cloning tool?
Thanks, Barbie. I drug a copy of the background over the composite, then created a layers mask and painted out everything but the grass at his feet.
DJ, You did a great job with this one. Chance looks like he is ready to take a walk down that path. Did you color match the images?
Thanks, Laurie. Yep, I did some color matching as the first step--it seemed easier that way.
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