Tutorial : Posterization Techniques. Tilt-Shift Photography Photoshop Tutorial | Miniature Faking | TiltShiftPhotography.net. This tutorial will walk you through how to create a tilt-shift image in Photoshop. It has been produced using Photoshop CS2 on a PC. Once you finish your tilt-shift image, make sure you upload your image for everyone to see. You should also check our our gear page to find all of the latest gear you need to create tilt-shift images. Gear PageSubmit Your Images Step 1: Photo Selection When choosing a photograph for the tilt-shift effect, bear in mind that you want to give the impression of a miniature model. For this tilt-shift photography Photoshop tutorial, we are using a picture of Times Square during a typical day: Even before the tilt-shift effect has been applied, it’s not too hard to imagine the scene as if it were a model.
To find an appropriate image, we suggest you browse through the flickr tilt-shift fakes pool. Step 2. Open the image in Photoshop and enter Quick Mask Mode by pressing Q on the keyboard, or select the Quick Mask icon as shown in the Tool Palette below: Step 3. Sketch Effect. Text and images Copyright (C) 2004 Vidar Madsen and may not be used without permission of the author.
Intention Meet Marius, my son. :) 1. High pass filtering High pass filtering means that we filter away the low frequencies of something, and let the high frequency bands pass. In image terms, this means that the detail of an image is kept, while the larger scale gradients are removed. First, duplicate the layer. Then Gaussian Blur the top layer with an appropriate radius. You need to experiment to find good values, but roughly speaking one can say that the larger the radius, the wider the high pass filter's frequency response, and the "fatter" the lines in the final sketch. Now we have a low pass filtered version of our image; all gradients and no detail. Then, to blend the two, we adjust the Layer's Opacity slider to 50%, and our high pass filtered image appears; Now it's time to Merge the two layers, so that we can continue to process them as one. Now, back to the image. 2. Voila. A Periodic Table of Visualization Methods.