Forum Moderators: Wolfenshire Forum Coordinators: Anim8dtoon
Photoshop F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 26 6:58 am)
Our mission is to provide an open community and unique environment where anyone interested in learning more about Adobe Photoshop can share their experience and knowledge, post their work for review and critique by their peers, and learn new techniques while developing the skills that allow each individual to realize their own unique artistic vision. We do not limit this forum to any style of work, and we strongly encourage people of all levels and interests to participate.
Checkout the Renderosity MarketPlace - Your source for digital art content!
What "calculations" did you apply? Levels? Curves? Brightness/Contrast?
Try this:
1 - Create and Adjustment layer above the base layer of Levels or Curves - your tool of preference.
2 - Create another one above it - Hue/Saturation and slide Sat down to 0 - make it B&W.
3 - Creat a new Layer right above the base image - change the mode to Soft Light.
4 - Hit the letter D to make your colors default B&W.
5 - Get a soft brush and lowe the opacity to 30%.
6 - Paint black over the circled areas - this is dodging and burning without the actual Dodge&Burn tools (which completely bite IMO). Paint sparingly and build up density - this is so you don't make it too dark too quickly.
7 - Aso paint over some of the lighter areas like their faces (and maybe portions of the lighter sides of their clothing as well) - to darken them down a bit as they'll blow out in print.
You don't have to stick with only 1 Soft Light layer - you can have several to build things further - either lighter or darker, or to alter small portions in a mass painted area. Did that make sense?
The reason to go through all of this is so that in making all these changes you're not doing anything to the actual image itself. If you look at what you've done so far, realize you haven't changed the base image YET. This is deliberate - if you later decide you want to change somethig BACK, you now can - if you've changed the base image at all, you can't.
Hope this helps-
-Lew ;-)
Before converting to CMYK. Check and corect bad areas. Enable View - Gamut warning to see which areas of the image will be afected with conversion. Next make new H/S adjustment layer and drag saturation slider to the left and grey color should disapear. If needed go trough each channel and drag the hue and saturation sliders. In most cases you`ll need to fix just master :)
Tihomir
Open your mind and share the knowledge!
I have foundpaint duabs and gausian filter on a top layer to remove the noise and add some artisitc flare to the piece without distroying the intent of reproduction then mask the result and allow the shaper requirment to peak through, like faces and buttons. You do this gently with a soft brush and a mask.
This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.
I have an old photo from a friend who would like a copy made. The photo dates back to WW1 and the paper has a silvery sheen to it in some areas. I want to correct these after scanning the photo but am unsure how to do it.