Saturday, 30 November 2013

Horse In The Night Background

Horse In The Night Background


 
 
Step 1.
I collect the stock images I am going to use for my manipulation. All stock used in this tutorial was purchased from Big Stock Photo I use photoshop CS4 and a Wacom Bamboo Fun graphic tablet.
Here you can see the images I chose;
1) Horse
2) Space
3) Meadow
 
As you can see there is still some of the horses original background left over, so I will use the pen tool to cut the rest of the background out of the horse. I also used the clone stamp tool to remove the horse's halter. Also if the horse is too small or big for the background I would use the free transform tool. (Edit > Free Transform) to position the horse. In the picture below you can see the free transform tool (the box around the horse.) Once you have made your changes with the free transform tool, hit enter on your keyboard and the box goes away. You can also see the other changes I made as mentioned in this step.
 
Then I paste the nebula and moon onto background. To do this open each image then I press ctrl + a on the keyboard to select the whole image, then go to the background and horse and press ctrl + v, repeating this step for the next image. At this point the colours don't match and they are arranged quite messily, so I will use the free transform tool again to arrange the images.
 
Because I am going to blend the nebula into the grassy paddock, the moon and horse layers are a bit of a distraction, so I will turn the horse and moon layer to 'invisible.' To do this I go to the layers panel and find the horse layer. I click the 'eye' as circled in red on the preview below. If I was to click the box where the eye was, the image will re-appear. Then I will repeat this step for the moon layer.
Step 2.
We now have the grassy background and the purple nebula. We can clearly see that it is two images, so I will blend it so the grass fades into the sky.
To do this I will add a layer mask to the nebula. To do this I select the layer I want to add a layer mask to, in this case the nebula layer.
Once I have selected my layer I select the circle surrounded by a square in the layers panel. (See circled image below.) This will then add a white layer on the right of my selected layer, as seen in the second preview below.
Click on the white layer. On the left in your tools panel the colours circled in red should change to black and white. If not, change them.
 
Then I select the brush tool and change my brush to one of the default soft round brushes. I make sure the colour is black, then I 'brush' over the bottom of the image. If I make a mistake, I change the colour to white, and using the soft brush I can bring the image back. But make sure you have the 'white layer mask' selected when you use the brush on the image. The image below how my blending turned out.
 

Part 2 ) Horse in the Night Background
Step 3.
Now it blends better, but the green grass and the purple nebula stands out a bit too much. So I will give the grass a purple tint. To do this I select the grass layer and then go image > duplicate. (So we have the original layer if we make any mistakes.) Then on the duplicated layer I go to image > adjustments > hue & saturation. Then I experiment with the sliders until I have reached the desired effect. I also brought the moon layer back, cut the moon out and gave it a purple tint by using the hue and saturation again.
Step 4.
The background is now prepared, so I will bring the horse layer back. I will adjust the hue & saturation of the horse as well, so it has a purple tint and also matches the background.
As you can see the feet don't blend with the background, so I will select the horse layer and add a layer mask as seen in step 3. But instead of using a soft round default photoshop brush, I will select the default photoshop grass brush. Once you have selected the grass brush go to window > brushes.
If the 'colour dynamics' has a 'tick' next to it, select it so it's unchecked. Then use the brush on the layer mask where the horses hooves are, to blend it into the grass background.
Step 5.
Now for the mane and tail. To do the mane and tail I create a new layer above the horse layer. Then I colour pick purple colour from the horse's body. A colour that isn't too dark, but not to light. Then I change my brush to a hard round default brush and begin to sketch the basic shape of the mane and tail. So far I have only erased part of the previous mane and re-painted the new one using two colours.
 
 
Now I will go in and make the mane and tail thicker and add highlights and lowlights to give it life. Basically I just keep making strands following the flow of the horses mane and tail, starting with a large round brush and making it smaller as the mane gets thicker and not so 'transparent.' You can see a close up of the mane and tail below.
 

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