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Make your photos and digital images
become real eye-catchers. Make your friends and family go ‘Wow’ when you
show them your photo album. Using a little bit of Photoshop magic,
here’s some tips on how to make your photos stand out from the crowd.
Before you apply any of these
special effects, it can be useful to apply a masking on your photo to
select which areas you want to change and which you want to keep
unchanged. You can easily get a nice soft fade between the effect and
no-effect areas. This is called masking and there’s many ways of doing
it. The one method I almost always use now (it took years before I
discovered it) is the ‘quick mask mode’. It is very easy to use and
usually gives acceptable results.
Quick masking
In Adobe Photoshop find the
button called ‘edit in quick mask mode’. It’s located near the bottom of
the main tool bar and looks like a circle in a rectangle. There’s also a
short-cut key: Q. Once in quick mask mode, you can select and deselect
areas simply by painting them with white and black respectively, using
the standard brush tool. Zoom to 100 or 200 % for best accuracy. You
might want to use a soft-edged brush to avoid hard edges. Alternatively,
when you’re done, exit the masking mode and go to ‘Select > Feather’ and
set the feather radius to 5-10 pixels or so. A nice option is that you
can set the opacity to anywhere between 0 and 100%, allowing you to
apply the effect stronger or weaker in one part of the image that
another.
Layer masking
Slightly more complicated, you can
add a layer mask. This allows you to apply any effect gradually
from any point in your photo. Follow these steps in Photoshop:
1. Select ’Windows > Layers’.
2. Right click on your layer and select ’Duplicate
layer’.
3. Click on the little icon in the bottom of the
layer box called ‘Add layer mask’.
4. Select the ‘Gradient tool’ on the main tool box.
5. Choose a gradient style from the top ‘Options’
bar (linear, radial etc.).
6. Now click on your image on the point you don’t
want to change, then drag the mouse away to the point where you want the
full effect to take place. The effect will be applied gradually more and
more along this line you’ve now create.
7. Finally, go back onto your original background
layer and apply any effect you want. This will apply the effect in a
soft, gradual way. Use opacity to turn the effect down to less than full
strength if you want.
Lens-like effects
Using the layer masking described above, you can
apply ‘Gaussian blur’ which will make the selected areas appear
soft-focused, a bit like if you had used a large-aperture lens. With
‘Curves’ you can make your corners darker than the center, replicating
the lens effect called vignetting. Technically, vignetting is considered
a lens dysfunction, but subjectively it can add an extra feeling to your
photo, a kind of frame that will have a ‘sucking’ effect, bringing more
attention into the centre of your photo. You can also just lower the
contrast and/or colour-saturation around your main subject, helping to
separate it from the background clutter. There’s many other options, be
creative!
Soft glow effect
Great for creating a ‘romantic’ look for portraits.
Here’s what you have to do:
1. Duplicate layer.
2. Apply ‘Gaussian blur’ to the new (top) layer.
Make it blurry, but leave a little detail.
3. Play around with the blend modes and opacity till
you get what you want:
‘Darken’ or ‘Multiply’ blends darkens image details
while also softening features and adding a halo. Good for soft,
expressive shadows.
‘Lighten’ or ‘Screen’ blends lightens the image
instead. Nice for adding high key or highlight glows.
‘Soft Light’ and ‘Overlay’ adds contrast and
saturation. Especially useful for landscapes and still life photos.
Black-and-white-ish
A cool metallic black-and-white’ish
look, in my opinion very suitable for documentary work and subdued
portraits, is easily obtained by setting the contrast high (curves) and
colour saturation low. Do it with Photoshop’s ‘layers’ to be able to
tweak your exact settings it in place.
Colour grading
You know how some movies have a ’special look’,
golden brown, sick yellow-greenish, cool blue etc.? You can get the same
effect in your photos if you want. The simple way is to go to ‘Image >
Adjustments > Hue/Saturation’, click ‘Colourize’ and use the slide bars
to select your preferred grading. If you are going for a well-defined
colour, it’s better to use the ‘Edit > Fill’ function. Simply select the
colour you want and set the ‘Blending mode’ to ‘Colour’. Either way,
it’s good first to duplicate your layer before you start. This will
allow you to preserve some of the original colours by turning the colour
grading down. Use the ‘Opacity’ slider in the layer box to do this. If
you want a duotone image, simply make 2 duplicate layers and give them
different colour gradings. Mix them together, again with the ‘Opacity’
slider and the different ‘Layer blending mode’ options in the layer box.
One example: To give your image a warm golden-brown
colour tone, first make two duplicate layers. Use ‘Edit > Fill’ to make
the first one brown (#963A12) and the second one yellow (#EDC715). Set
opacities to 30 and 60% respectively and select the ‘Multiply’ blending
mode for the top (yellow) layer. Tweak it in place to get it exactly
like you want. Also try adding a soft glow, as described above.
Micro contrast
This is a really neat trick to
enhance your contrast and draw out texture details in your photos. You
can even use it when your overall contrast is already maxed out, using
all tonal ranges from pure black to pure white. The procedure is similar
to the normal ‘Unsharpen Mask’, but with some special settings. Go to
‘Filter > Sharpen > Unsharpen Mask’ and set the ‘Amount’ to around
20-30%, the ‘Radius’ to 50-100 pixels and zero on the ‘Threshold’. You
will get a subtle contrast enhancement that, for some pictures at least,
works really well.
Using any of the above mentioned
effects can improve your photos and make them really eye-catching.
However, learning when to use them and when not to use them is just as
important as learning how to use them. When to use special effects in
your photos is a matter of personal taste and judgement. Use it, but
don’t overdo it. Often, less is more. |