Alex Greene Photography
  • Photography
    • Landscapes
    • Skiing
    • Wildlife
    • Cloudbridge
    • By Process of Imagination
  • Film
  • Services
  • Store
  • About/Contact
  • Blog

Looking for Spring - Project Tutorial

27/1/2018

0 Comments

 
This is a fantastic compositing technique that is really quite simple to create and all you need is two images and inspiration for an idea!  Mine was the feeling of looking forward to Spring, yours could be anything, but in case you’re stuck here’s one on me: ‘looking towards the future’ - see what you can do! 
Picture
Putting the Idea Together
As you’ve probably guessed, there are two parts to creating this piece - the main image and the image inside of the lens. For the sake of this tutorial, I’m going to assume that you’re shooting a similar image to mine, one that shows a change in time or season. The easiest way to complete this composite project is to use an old photograph of yours for the image inside the lens. I looked through my old files and found an image of a stunning bluebell woodland at sunrise.  This would make the perfect representation of a nice, warm and colourful location that makes me miss Spring. Yours could be a holiday location at sunset or a view over the fields where you walk the dog, anything that means something to you.

​
​Equipment
It’s really quite simple, you need a camera and a spare lens.  The camera could be a phone or a DSLR, but the wider the lens and the more control you have over the settings the better, and if you don’t have a spare lens, any charity shop should have old and mouldy lenses for next to nothing!  You’ll also need an editing software that can handle layering, I’d recommend Adobe Photoshop, but there are alternatives out there. These next things aren’t essential, but they’ll make your life easier; firstly, a tripod to hold your composition steady and secondly, a remote shutter release to fire the camera once you’ve perfected the shot.
​

Preparing the Photograph
Let’s assume that, although it’s entirely possible to take this image on a phone camera or a simple point and shoot, you’re using a DSLR with manual or at least semi-automatic modes and a tripod to compose and stabilise the camera.  Now you need to turn on Live View and set your lens to its minimum focus distance and this should create a scene that looks somewhat similar to mine. You’re now ready to introduce the lens into the image, so lets get the settings sorted!
Picture
The Settings
These are only a recommendation of course and you will need to adjust the settings for the lighting on your shoot, however let me explain why settings similar to these are needed for this photo project.  F/4 will create a good amount of separation between the subject and the background.  This means you get a feel for what you are leaving behind for the landscape inside the lens without the details become distracting.  Next up, ISO, I used ISO800 for my image because I was in a woodland which was sheltering me from a lot of the daylight and it is important to achieve a relatively quick shutter speed.  A shutter speed of 1/250 should be able to freeze any small movements that you make whilst holding the lens.
Picture
Picture
Taking the Photograph
If you’re camera has Live View this is where it’s going to be most useful because you can see whether you’re holding the lens in the correct place. If you’re using an aperture value around F/4 the depth-of-field will be quite small and so you’ll have to be careful to make sure that the back of the lens in in focus. For the best results you want to hold the lens as parallel to the camera as possible.
Picture
Import and Basic Edit
From now on we’ll refer to the main image as IMAGE 1 and to the image inside of the lens as IMAGE 2. So, you’ve done the hard bit there’s only a few steps to the edit. Start by importing image 1 into Photoshop and giving it a basic edit. I chose to desaturate and darken my image slightly to help it contrast against the colourful and bright Spring scene in image 2.  You can always go back and adjust the image 1 once the images are merged.
Picture
Preparing the Image Inside the Lens
Image 2 needs some distortion before it can be placed inside the lens. If you were to look through a curved piece of glass, the scene would be contorted and stretched at the edges, so we need to apply this effect.
​
Start by opening image 2 and cropping it to be square.  Follow this going to ‘Filter’, down to ‘Distort’ and then selecting ‘Spherize’.  A popup box will appear, you can try ‘-75’ to begin with, although other amounts may suit your image more.  This is now ready to copy over onto image 1. To copy this area, use the elliptical marquee tool, hold down shift and click and drag from the very top left corner of the canvas down to the bottom right - use Ctrl+C to copy and then open image 1 and use Ctrl+V to paste.  You can now hide this layer by clicking the small eye on the left of the new layer in the layers panel.

Picture
​Preparing the Lens for Image 2
​
Image 1 is nearly ready but first you need to prepare the area that image 2 is going to sit upon.  To do this, zoom in on the lens and use the elliptical marquee tool (+ SHIFT) to create an even circular selection inside the back of the lens. You will then go to the bottom of the layers panel, click on the small half black/half white circle and select solid colour and change the colour to black. This will fill the small circle you created with black, we do this so that we can blur the edge of image 2 and help it look realistic. You now need to re-arrange the layers slightly - simply click and drag the layer called ‘Color Fill 1’ underneath the layer named ‘Layer 1’.  See left.

Picture
The Final Steps
Select the layer containing image 2 and use Ctrl+T to start transforming the layer. Now shrink and move image 2 so that it lays on top of the black circle you created on the back of the lens. The last stage is to blur the edges of image 2. To do this select ‘Layer 1’ in the layers panel and then select the ‘Magic Wand Tool’ (W) and click anywhere outside of the circle of image 2. You have now selected the area surrounding image 2 and so it needs inverting - either use Ctrl+Shift+I or select ‘Inverse’ in the ‘Select’ menu. To blur this selection either use Shift+f6 or go to ‘Select’ > ‘Modify’ > ‘Feather’ and input a value of ‘50’ to begin with.  If, after the next stage, the blur is too little or too much simply use the history window to back up a couple of stages and try another feather value. All you need to do now is apply a layer mask to image 2 and the image is complete, do this by clicking the small rectangle at the bottom of the layers panel that contains a small circle. Image 2 should now look similar to the image to the right of this paragraph.

Thanks for reading, I hope this has been a useful tutorial.  Feel free to let me know your thoughts in the comments and let me know how the project has gone for you!
0 Comments

Making A Composite Creation - Part 1

25/7/2017

0 Comments

 
I want to show how I go from an initial idea to a final image; therefore, this post is not going to delve into editing processes or specific compositing techniques and stick to a step-by-step guide, that you may be able to follow yourself and create something intriguing.  As a disclaimer of sorts, this is not the only way to create composite ideas, it's likely not even the best way, but it is the way I use and it works for what I do - so I hope that it can be of some use to you.

For this process I'm going to need an example, the third image in my recent project By Process of Imagination will work just fine!
Picture

Step 1 - Find Inspiration

Yes of course, the first step is to work out what you want to create. I imagine you are reading this because you either already have a completely original concept that you want to bring to life, or you want to try your hand and compositing and want to know where to start. If you're the latter of those two categories then there are a few places to start:
- Have you had any interesting dreams that you could form into one photographic scene?
- An idea or concept that you wish to illustrate. 
The best way to get started is to hit Google and start researching different effects and looks. A simple search for 'Composite Photography Effects' can return thousands of ideas that you can pull apart and fit into a completely different photograph idea. If you can't think of something wholly original, then it's best to find inspiration from other places but try and make the overall image something unique to your style. 

My inspiration for a number of things in this project was Disney Pixar's 2001 'Monsters, Inc'.  In particular for this image, there's a scene in which Mike and Sulley are flying around a warehouse of doors, each of which goes to another place (similar to the idea that runs throughout my project).  I also knew that I wanted it to be laid out in a form that reminds me of prison cells (highly structured and routine).
Picture
Monsters, Inc door warehouse
Picture
Prison cell layout

Step 2 - Draw up a Plan

Don't worry you don't have to be master artist and draw up a fully detailed sketch, I can personally draw about as well as I can fly, but for this image in particular there was no need to touch pencil to paper at all. For this image I drew the plan inside Photoshop and then replaced the parts as they were photographed; however, if your image is highly complicated (not so many straight lines and simply structures) and you really cannot draw then you can skip straight to Step 3.
Picture
Picture

To show you how detailed they really need to be (and prove my lack of drawing capabilities) I thought I'd include a sketch for an idea that I have not made yet. The simplicity of the sketch doesn't matter so much, its more that you get an idea for what you would like to include and where you would like to place objects within the scene once you have captured them.


Step 3 - Make a List

Time to find out everything you need to photograph, this stage is good because it can also give you a good estimate of the time frame that it'll take you to finish. If you came to this stage by skipping Step 2 then you're going to need to be able to picture the scene you wish to create in as much detail as possible in order to make the list.  Here's what I needed for the main picture:
- 16 doors (I ended up using 10).
- 4 images of the subject; 2 walking, 1 crouching and 1 climbing.
- 4 types of wall for backgrounds.
- Concrete material for the ledges.
- Light bulbs.

Here's a list of the things I will need to photograph in order to make the as-of-yet incomplete sketch above:
- Subject image from behind.
- A hill with a small treeline (a small cluster of trees may compliment the image just as well as one tree would).
- A pathway through grass.
- A doorway with a light behind it.
- 3 starry night images to pick and choose aspects from.
- 1 milky way image.
- 2 earth/mud pattern images to create the planets from.

​Coming in Part 2...

In the next instalment of this blog series I will cover how you should photograph the parts in order for them to fit well into a scene and how important lighting is in making a realistic composite.

Thank you for reading part 1 and I hope to see you back here for part 2. To get a notification when the post is live, head on over to my social media pages and follow me!

0 Comments

Composite Project - Exploding Orange

25/7/2014

0 Comments

 
People often ask me how I made this image:
Picture
So I thought that I would break it down it to the several parts which make up the final image.  The inspiration for the image came from a photo I saw a while ago with a water splash coming out of a cup, I then worked around the splash idea.  Without knowing what I was doing it took a long time to complete this project, as I kept noticing small mistakes, mainly the reflections.  So, there are four parts to this image; the splash, the main orange, the small top piece of orange and the orange with the knife in.  The background is then comprised of 2 strips (shown in the bottom image).

Splash

Picture

Main Orange

Picture

Top Piece

Picture

Knife

Picture

Background


Picture

There are a few faults in the image, I'm not sure whether you can notice these but I have, after quite a while of looking at it I have.  One way to make the image look more 'realistic' you need to take care with the lighting.  I closed all the blind in my kitchen, turned the lights off from the rooms surrounding and had one line of lights directly above the scene.  I then placed two flashes either side and slightly above.  My mistake here was not using umbrellas instead of bare flashes.  

A lot of the time I get stuck for ideas and realise that I haven't taken any images in a while.  If you find yourself in this position then feel free to take my photo as a basis for your own image project.  It is not wrong to get ideas from others, however do not directly copy the work - and if you do then do not release it, keep the project as a personal piece.  

Like, share and feel free to leave a comment with any questions.  Thanks for reading.
0 Comments

    Categories

    All
    Cairngorms 2016
    Composite Photography
    Days Out
    Opinions
    Post Processing
    Projects
    Reviews
    Tips
    Video

    Archives

    June 2020
    January 2018
    August 2017
    July 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    November 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    October 2014
    July 2014

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.