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| Stylized Haunted House Tutorial Author - Tamlin (http://forums.biorust.com/member.php?userid=22224) |
This tutorial describes the process I used to create the image "This House Is Haunted". The image was inspired by the highly stylized landscape photographs of Jason Ertel.
The first step was to pick out the elements that made up the character of these images. I finally decided it boiled down to three specific characteristics:
So now we know what effects we want to achieve, lets get to it! Firstly, you'll need the main subject photo - in this case the house that we are going to "haunt". Here's the one I'm going to use:
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You can download your own copy to follow along with the tutorial from here. As you can see, the sky in this photo is anything but dramatic, so we'll need a sky image too. Here's mine:
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Step 5: I wasn't happy with the balance of the composition in the original House image - I thought there was too much lawn at the bottom of the image, and it needed more space above the house to show off the dramatic sky. First, I checked the image size (Image > Image Size...) and noted it was 1000px x 680px. I decided I would shave off 80px from the bottom of the image, so I selected the Crop tool and entered the following values in the option bar:
Click outside the top left corner of the image and drag the Crop tool's cursor downwards and to the right until the crop area extends across the entire image. Press Enter to crop the image. Now add an extra 80px of space to the top of the image. Select Image > Canvas Size... and set the following options:
Click OK to finish.
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Already a big improvement, but there's more to come!
And here's the image:
Step 8: Now it's time to work on the house. Click the House layer to make it active, then add a Levels adjustment layer above it. Don't make any changes just yet - click OK to close the Levels dialog box. We don't want this Levels adjustment layer to affect the Sky layer, so we need to clip it to the House layer. Hold the ALT (on mac: OPT) key down and hover your mouse over the join between the House layer and the Levels adjustment layer above it - the cursor should change to two overlapping circles. Click to create the Clipping Mask. Now we can double-click the Levels adjustment layer icon to open the Levels dialog box. Once again, play around with the sliders to really beef up the contrast of the House image. These are the settings I used:
And here's the image:
Now for the extreme sharpening. I originally thought this was the result of using a filter such as Unsharp Mask or Smart Sharpen, but I found the following method gave a much better effect...
Step 13: To consolidate the final image and to restore some black to the shadows in the House layer, add one more Levels adjustment layer to the top of the layer stack. This is not a clipping mask, so it will affect the entire image. The settings I used were:
Your final Layers palette should look something like this:
And here's the final image:
Please note that the technique appears a little unsubtle in the above images due to the effects of resizing and optimizing the images for posting to the web. With a larger and higher resolution image, the effect will be better. Also remember that, as with most Photoshop tutorials, none of the above values are absolutes - don't be afraid to play around with the adjustment layers, the amount of Gaussian blur and the layers' Fill values to get the effect exactly to your taste. In Photoshop, experimentation is the key to success! |