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Photoshop F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Sep 19 10:49 pm)

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Subject: Making a sunny day photo into a rainy day photo


joezabel ( ) posted Tue, 22 May 2001 at 9:58 PM · edited Sun, 22 September 2024 at 12:33 AM

file_173537.jpg

This is a tough one! It isn't difficult to create the lighting ambiance of a rainy day-- increase the contrast, decrease the brightness, decrease the saturation, and use the paintbucket tool with the setting of 'multiply' to lay a coating of grey overy the whole scene. Creating the stormclouds is a bit more difficult. but I figure that is more a matter of developing ones prowess with the airbrush tool. But creating the rain itself is extremely difficult! Attached is my best attempt, but it's still too over-the-top and clutzy (and looked even worse before I reduced it 30% for the side-by-side pic.) It was done by painting each raindrop individually; I created an inch-square swatch of these in one corner (on a separate layer) and then used the rubber stamp tool (a very useful tool!) to proliferate the pattern throughout the picture. I went over these with the blur tool to try to de-emphasize some of the more obviously clutsy rain, and to give somewhat of a 3-d look. I added another layer beneath it where I added rainmist drifting through the street. I really didn't intend to make the scene as rainy as I did, but I found that adding more rain tended to 'sell' the rain that was already there. Fortunately I don't need this for a current assignment; I'm just experimenting to expand my repertoire. Does anybody have any suggestions or experience about how to do this better?


theFOG ( ) posted Tue, 22 May 2001 at 10:41 PM

file_173538.jpg

Try this. 1.Create a new layer. Set your colors to white and gray. 2.Fill 2nd layer with gray. 3.Apply Filter/Texture/Grain/stippled. 4.Apply Filter/Motion blur/@ 90 degrees. 5.Adjust transparency to taste.


teflon ( ) posted Wed, 23 May 2001 at 11:56 AM

file_173539.jpg

Simple way to create rain. Lets make some selection with "magic wand", start from sky. Keep your wand tolerance around 20 and antialiasing on, click somewhere in sky to add more sky to your selection push "Shift Button" down (in keyboard) keep pressing shift, (You should see a small Plus icon instead cf magic wand icon... meaning that you can add to selection) click in sky area that is not selected yet....You notice selection area grows. If you need to remove some area from selection so simply "Alt Click" to move part of area. Before we save the selection we add some more selection to sky but now use "Lasso" tool. Select Lasso tool and make "Feather" propeties at least 5. Now Shift or Alt clicking add or remove parts from horizon. Selection should be smooth between sky and horizon. When you are done with selection its time to save it choose "Select Menu > Save Selection" Name your selection Sky. Now invert your selection ("Select Menu > Inverse") and save selection again name it Middle. Using Lasso remove (Alt clicking) stuff that is far away in picture like horizon, houses, wood etc. In this image I kept ,cars ,ground ,walkway and pillar on the right. Save Your selection and name it Ground. Create 5 new layers name them Sky, Middle, Ground, Rain and Darkenig.(Darkening in bottom layer over background). Maybe your image need some darkening. Select the Darkenig layer and fill it using gradient tool (black and white). Draw from top right to down in 75 decrees angle. In your layer opion box (F7) select Multiply and make Opacity around 30 (or Draw slider for live result). You see sky became darker.(try some other layer options as well maybe Color and Overlay). Dont make it too dark since you are going to use more layers whitch add some darkening. Fill your Rain layer with white color "Edit > Fill". Draw some black strokes/lines using painbrush tool texture comb or similar (draw diagonal around 75 degrees). Blur Your Rain layer with "Motion Blur" using angle 75 distance maybe around 400. Adjust color to make it more gray "Image > Adjust > Variations..." Make it more lighter it should be gray color. Make Rain layer properties Multiply and make Opacity around 30. (This is your rain template). Now - lets add some fake rain. Select your Rain layer ,select all, "Ctrl+A" copy, "Ctrl+C" and paste, "Ctrl+V" now you have a new layer over Rain layer, use properties Overlay opacity 40. Lets add some effects in "Filter > Noise > Add Noise".Select Uniform Monochrome and Amount 45. In "Filter > Blur > Motion Blur" angle 75 pixel amount 11. And Its rainy day.... Lets select rain layer (rain template) again now we add some selection, "Select Menu > Load Selection". channel sky selection. Now "Ctrl+C" copy. Activate Sky layer and paste, "Ctrl+V". Options in layer >>Multiply and Opacity low around 12. Go to "Filter > Noise > Add Noise".Select Gaussian Monochrome and Amount around 20. (Fine rain far away) In "Filter > Blur > Motion Blur" angle 75 pixel amount around 11. Now its a time to make some foreground rain a bit heavier. Select Rain layer then "Select Menu > Load Selection" Channel Middle. "Ctrl+C" copy selection load Middle layer "Ctrl+v" Paste. Change layer properties to HARD LIGHT opacity 20. Add some heavy noise and blur BUT change the angle to lets say 85 tweak little with pixel distanse as well. To make your street more wet use your ground selection... copy from rain layer as before etc. Use diffrent blur angle -75 smaller noise. In layer optionsa Color burn gives a nice dark street, Screen gives light street.. tweak yorself.


joezabel ( ) posted Thu, 24 May 2001 at 3:49 PM

Wow! Thanks for the great responses! Reading these is an education in Photoshop!


JasperBee ( ) posted Tue, 30 August 2022 at 8:55 AM

Great question! There are a few different ways that you can improve your writing skills. One option is to read other people's essays and reviews, or even write your own reviews of the same type of product or service. This will help you learn how to structure your thoughts and develop a proper argument.


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