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05/21/2004 06:02:01 AM · #1 |
I know it's not really exciting, but it was just my first try to make sure I can do it right before investing a lot of time and making a really good one.
Does it look okay though? |
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05/21/2004 06:09:01 AM · #2 |
Excellent. First one I see outdoors. Looks great. Only the one on the right (his back) looks like maybe it was Photoshopped in. Great work. I have to try one
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05/21/2004 06:11:32 AM · #3 |
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05/21/2004 06:25:36 AM · #4 |
Originally posted by Jacko: Excellent. First one I see outdoors. Looks great. Only the one on the right (his back) looks like maybe it was Photoshopped in. Great work. I have to try one |
Thanks.
Yeah, that one was tricky, because when I sat down, the seat had moved slightly, so I had to cut all the way to the shirt for it to look right. |
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05/21/2004 06:38:34 AM · #5 |
I think it looks WONDERFUL for your first attempt. I don't think I could ever figure out how to do it! I hope you post more when you reshoot! :o)
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05/21/2004 06:52:06 AM · #6 |
would just love to know how that is done .....keep going back and having another look - just looks so good
sue |
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05/21/2004 07:37:27 AM · #7 |
I really like it. The back does seem a little off. I tried to make one this morning when I got to work... I came in early...
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05/21/2004 04:09:22 PM · #8 |
Thanks for comments on this.
Todd, yours is great. I'm going to try something like that, with more interactions some time.
Sue, I don't know if there is an easier way to do this, but here's what I did. I don't know if there are easier ways (though there probably are, I'm not all that photoshop saavy), but here are some basic directions.
You just take a bunch of photos using the same settings, leaving the camera on a tripod so everything stays the same (aperature, focus, etc.)
Then, in photoshop, you copy a portion of one photo and paste it on another one of them. Place it in its exact location. Save it as a jpg, and clone/heal in the sides to get the colors correct if they're slightly off. If they're more than slightly off, you should adjust the levels before hand. In mine above, the one against the wall was completely off because the sun decided to poke its head out, and that screwed be up. So if you look closesly, there is a little yellow on that portion, but I got it as close as I could to the rest of the wall.
And keep doing this process until you have everything into one photograph.
I hope that helps.
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05/21/2004 04:38:11 PM · #9 |
that's really helpful thankyou David :)
sue |
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