boat,
clone stamp,
editing digital photos,
healing brush in
Editing Challenge
Thursday, June 2, 2011 at 5:04PM
Jason Collin 
DIGITAL EDITING CHALLENGE is a new feature on Jason Collin Photography. Download the source photo of the original, then edit it to be as close to my own edit of the photograph. I fully expect some of you to be able to do an even better job than I did. Place a link to your edit in the comments below and I will add it to the body of this blog post with name credit. After the challenge is closed (time to be determined) I will update this blog post with how I made my edit. Thanks for taking the challenge!
EDITS THAT NEED TO BE MADE:
GOOD LUCK & THANKS FOR TAKING THE CHALLENGE!
boat,
clone stamp,
editing digital photos,
healing brush in
Editing Challenge
Friday, April 22, 2011 at 4:11PM
Jason Collin
2011 Ferrari 458 Italia at a car show in St. Petersburg Florida
Car shows are great places to see a large number of awesome cars in a small space. However, that small space and numerous other car fans walking around create a nearly impossible situation for photographing the cars in full. Detail shots are usually what I focus on, but still I want to have at least a few full car shots as well. Some of you may know that the Ferrari 458 Italia is my current favorite car in the world. At a recent St. Petersburg, Florida car show I had a chance to talk with the owners of the above 458 Italia who were very nice people. I photographed their Ferrari at length.
I could not get a shot like I wanted to while there due to other cars being parked so close to the 458 Italia and of course because of many other people coming to peek at Ferrari's latest mid-engine super car. So I had to settle for the best angle I could get taking into account the sun's position and just the space I had to shoot in. Photoshop CS5 helped with the rest.
Too clone out things from complex surroundings, quick select them then clone stamp in safetyIn the above screen shot you can see how I first used the Quick Select Tool (W) to put a protective fence around the objects I wanted to remove (silver car, people, etc). I do this because the Clone Stamp Tool (S) is very temperamental and very hard to use along a distinct edge like the front fender of the red Ferrari and the silver Ferrari. Basically, containing the unwanted object in a quick select field allows me to not worry about coloring outside the lines, so to speak. You can see I selected some grass from the foreground and already started stamping it onto the silver Ferrari. The sharp edge of the red Ferrari fender will remain perfectly intact.
Likewise for the people above the red Ferrari. I will clone some of the trees and stamp them on top of the people to complete the illusion that the Ferrari 458 Italia is alone in a field. To close the quick select areas hit CMD-M (on a Mac).
Using this quick select and cloning method will allow you to cleanly and easily remove objects from complex surroundings.
Thursday, March 24, 2011 at 3:33PM
Jason Collin
Top: the original RAW image Bottom: after using clone stamp tool to clean background
When I go around saying digital photography editing skills are 50% of what you need to produce a satisfactory final image, I really mean it even though every other photographer around would probably disagree with that. I invite you to look at the above before and after shots and tell me in the comments below what percent digital editing had in helping the final image be all it could be.
For this photography tip I will just concentrate on:
When I first pulled up this photo in Aperture 3, I really liked the bird in flight action. The great egret was caught in an unusual mid-flap wing position. However, the background was not clean and the egret's feet were overlapping a light post. Then there was the corner of a roof intruding in the lower left of the frame. Finally, there was a single tall light post on the right of the frame that was another distraction.
To me the two things that really make a photograph of a common subject matter standout are light and background. You need good light for a flattering exposure and a clean background to let the subject stand out. While it is entirely possibly to be at a location where one can get both of these things just right, I, myself, do not want to be limited to just those exact right circumstances. Hence, I have worked on my clone stamp skills with earnest.
Now, if you have used the clone stamp tool in Photoshop you know it kind of has a mind of its own. It almost never works like you want it too, especially if you use it in broad strokes. First, in order to be able to use the clone stamp tool, you must have a source area in your photo you can sample from. In the great egret shot, I have plenty of other gray clouds to sample to later stamp onto the light posts. Really this is an ideal shot for using the clone stamp tool to fix because of the ample source cloning material, the relatively small amount of area that needs to be stamped on, and the fact that the subject does not much overlap any of the background distractions (just a bit of feet do).
The shortcut for selecting the clone stamp tool is "S" and the key to using Photoshop efficiently is learning as many keyboard shortcuts as you can. To change the size of the brush use the bracket keys: ] and [ To sample an area hold the Option key (on a Mac) then click on the desired spot. I very rarely use the clone stamp at 100% as that makes is hard to control and often artifacts are introduced. For this shot I mostly used 80% opacity. Once I sampled a cloud I stamped in ver short strokes, never more than one or two at a time. Then I would go back and sample the same or another area. Also, I almost always use a soft brush (see screenshot).
So to summarize how I use the clone stamp tool in Photoshop CS5:
Try this clone stamping technique on one of your photos and post a link in the comments below to a before and after shot, or e-mail the shot to me and I will include it in this post.