Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Creative Photoshop Technique

A while back, the furrygoat sent me a link to PanosFX. Panos has a number of freely downloadable actions for Photoshop ( I use CS2) that are out of this world. This tutorial covers how to use the PanosFX B&Big action combined with my own twist to produce the following image:
flower collage thumb.jpg

From beginning to end, it only took me about 1/2 hour to create this picture. Putting together this blog post took way more time than the image editing ;-)

I started with a basic flower picture that I took last summer:
flower.jpg
I ran the custom action on it, which produced the following results.
flower collage web.jpg
Next, I spread a chroma key green screen out, sat my son down on it, holding a piece of card board (a prop to simulate one of the picture 'pieces'. I took 5 or 6 shots from different angles and this is the one that I chose for the piece:
green screen.jpg

Since I used a green screen, it only took a couple of minutes to crop and remove the background using the magic wand tool in photoshop giving me the following result:
remove green.jpg
I resized the portrait of my son down to the appropriate scale and pasted him into the flower picture as a layer.
The Panos action generated a composite image, with each 'puzzle piece' consisting of a layer. I chose the piece/layer that I wanted my son to hold and I selected it in the layer pallete.
Next I moved it [the layer] to the top of the stack so that it would always be visible.
I then used the Edit/Transform/Perspective feature to move the layer over the cardboard "placeholder". While the layer was still selected, I changed it's opacity to 60% and erased the portion of the picture that was covering up my sons fingers. I then changed the opacity back to 100%, changed the background color to black, flattened the image and exported it as .jpg. Here's a larger version of the finished product:
View image
If you were interested in making the image more realistic, you could add a gradient based gaussian blur to introduce a realistic depth of field. Lighting effects would also add to the realism.
Let me know if you have any questions and have fun!