Saturday, November 23, 2013

Amazing Brushes

EXPLORE THE BRUSH TOOLS

1. Create a new photoshop document of height: 200px Width: 400px. 
2. Make your main colour on your pallete black and fill background layer.
3. Create a new layer over that.
4. Go to brushes and make sure it is on airbrush (has soft edges). Change the pen weight to 9.
5. Paint a single dot towards the left of the image. 
6. Go to Filter > Stylise > Wind.
7. Repeat this five times times, or press [CTRL F] five times.
8. Go to Filter > Blur > Motion blur. Set Angle to 0 and Distance to 25 pixels.
9. Press Edit > Free Transform or CTRL T and rotate so that the rain drop is about 70 degrees to the ground plane.
10. Press Ctrl + I to inverse the image. 
11. Press Ctrl + A to select the entire image.
11. Go to Edit > Define Brush Preset.
12. You now have a raindrop brush.

Adding an effect to the background

Now go back to the image. We need to prepare the background and either make it blurred or give it a light texture. For this particular picture, we will make a very simple rain effect. 

1. Make a new layer above the picture.
2. Go to Filter > Render > Clouds.
3. Go to Filter > Noise > Add Noise.
4. Go to Filter > Blur > Motion blur.
5. Turn the blend mode to 'vivid light'.
6. Take the opacity down to 30%.

Now we add the rain onto the image.

1. Go to the Brush Tool and look for the rain brush you created before in the Brush Palette.
2. Select Shape Dynamics in the Brush Palette. 
3. First lets begin with the midground rain. 
Under the Brush Presets Tab, change the master diametre of the brush to 90.
In the Shape Dynamics tab, change the Size Jitter to 50% and Angle Jitter to 1%
In the Scattering tab, change the Scatter: 1000%
Brush all of that on as desired.
Then turn the layer opacity to 50.
6. Next is the foreground rain. Change the master diametre of the brush to 180-250.
Size Jitter: 100%
Angle Jitter: 1%
Scatter: 1000%
Brush that on as desired.

And there you have it!



Saturday, November 2, 2013

Healing and Repairing Photos



Techniques

  • Clone Stamp Tool - fixing small scratches and creases 

  • The shot’s faded tones are very flat. To boost contrast, choose Layer>New Adjustment Layer>Levels. Click OK. Drag the black input level slider to the right to a value of 29. This darkens the shot’s faded grey shadows. Drag the white input levels slider to the left to a value of 215. This brightens the shot’s weak highlights. Drag the grey slider left to 1.24 to lighten the midtones. The shot now has more contrast. 

  • Convert to a smart object. Choose Filter>Convert for Smart Filters. Click OK. This turns the layer into a Smart Object, enabling you to fine-tune filter settings at a later date. Choose Filter>Noise>Dust & Scratches. Set Radius to 20 and Threshold to 15. 

  • In the Layers Panel, click on the white Smart Filter layer and press Cmd/Ctrl+I to invert it. 

  • Now grab the Brush tool from the Toolbox. Choose a soft round tip from the Brush Preset picker. Set the Toolbox’s foreground color swatch to white. Click on the black Smart Filter to target it. Spray 
white over the background’s black dust spots, fingerprints and thinnest white scratches to fill them in. 

  • Grab the Patch tool. In the Options Bar, choose Content-Aware. Set Adaptation to Very Strict. Tick Sample All Layers. Click on transparent ‘Layer 1’. Draw a patch around sections of scratches.

Sources