Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

Landscape Tutorial

preview2

In this tutorial Andreea takes us through a landscape photo manipulation. Using some provided stock images you’ll learn how to blend in different landscapes creating a surreal effect.

Finished Preview

img111

Introduction

Landscape manipulations are probably the easiest of the genre that can be done, if you have a nice scenic image in mind, you find the right stocks and can put them together to get a realistic-looking image. This tutorial will teach you how to achieve that.
So the first step, as in all of my tutorials, is to find the right stocks. For starters I’ll be using these 3 images;

Stock

img16

img22

img31

Step 1

Take all the files and copy/paste them onto a new canvas (file-new). Just make sure it’s pretty large in height because for now we don’t know how large the image will result as and it’s better to have it large and then you can crop it out.

Step 2

I took the image with the rocks and moved the layer (click and drag in layers menu) below the castle one. Now the image should look like this.

img41

For the blending I’ll go with the easiest method known to Photoshop users so far, and that is the eraser. I took a soft round brush for the eraser, size at 100px because I have a medium sized canvas. If your is small you should go with a smaller brush.

Step 3

I moved the background image (with the rocks) a little bit so the water areas of the 2 images blend in. The lighting and tones don’t really match so I used curves (image>adjustments>curves) to darken the rocks image.

img51

Step 4

I brightened (image>adjustments>brightness/contrast) the castle image a little bit and added a hint of copper to it with the color balance tool (image>adjustments>color balance). I just added a bit of red and yellow and got this.

img61
Time to use image #1.

Step 5

I used the magic wand tool to select the sky of the castle image, it’s all pretty clean and I had it all erased in just 2 clicks. You can also use the color range option. Then I placed the mountain mage below it and used a soft round eraser brush on the castle image to blend the hill at the far left end with the background I just added. Use the color balance if necessary to match the tones.

Step 6

Now I just need to find a sky image to complete the image. I’m gonna be using this image img81 that is a personal resource.

Step 7

Same as the usual, I wanted to blend it in with the mountains so I erased the bottom half of the image to uncover the mountains. I went with a medium sized eraser with a soft round brush.

img91

Step 8

One of the final steps is adding a few highlights. Just go with your gutt and what your instincts tell you natural lights should look like. I did that with the dodge tool, a smaller round soft brush, set at highlights and 20% exposure.

img101

Step 9

And the very final step is of course the postwork. I always hit auto-levels (image>adjustments>auto-levels or simply shift+ctrl+l) so it balances the tones of my image. You can also use color balance just to see which tones suit your work best.

Here is my final result.

img111


Category: Photomanipulation / Tutorials Author: Andreea
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

23 Responses

February 18, 2009

That looks pretty cool, I love how you blended all the images together, nicely done :o)


February 18, 2009
Vill

Hay. This is really cool :D :D :D I like this. very good job. Thank You for idea :)


February 19, 2009
randy

its an aweome work and nice to. fora beginner its beter to see and follow easier steps in every proedure


February 21, 2009

Good boy and good luck. Very nice man


February 28, 2009
Lionel

Just awesome!!


March 1, 2009
Ruppelman

Is a great Job, maybe if used a software to make the image HDR, looks really good


March 1, 2009

nice nice!


March 1, 2009
Michael

I like the idea here. You made great use of stock photographs and matched them up very well.

The one thing I would change is your use of the Eraser. I cringe when I see that word. You can do the same thing, but keep it 100 times more flexible by using a layer mask. I don’t think it’s too difficult a concept for beginners to understand. And you can just do so much more with masking. I’d use a little gradient with light brushing on top to blend the images. It’s so much easier to adjust if you don’t like what you’ve done after a while. With the Eraser, if you discover something you don’t like, you have no choice but to go back in the document’s History.

And Auto-Levels is great for this specific purpose, but it really lacks the control you get with using a curves adjustment layer.


March 5, 2009
Jackie

Very nice..thanks.!


April 27, 2009

awesome..nice tutorials..thanks


May 10, 2009

A great bit of photo retouching with a very pleasing result.


June 29, 2009

Great Tutorial Thanks