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Thursday, May 10, 2012 at 4:31PM
Jason Collin
This editing style was inspired by the Jem cartoon series! -- Model: AbbyI was going through Netflix's always woeful list of new releases when I saw that the cartoon series Jem was now available. I remember watching this cartoon in the 80s because of the vivid pastel colors and style of the animation. So this afternoon I went about converting one of my own photographs into a Jem-style image.
The above is my final image next to a photo of Jem (source Wikipedia). Maybe long before I saw Jem in Netflix I had a subconscious thought to convert the shot of model Abby into a Jem-style one as I did not really like how I originally shot the photo, but I kept it lying around for some reason.
The first thing I did was to load the original image (see above) into Photoshop CS5. Well, actually before that I did some slight warming to the image in Aperture 3 via Nik Color Efex Pro 3.
In Photoshop using the Quick Select Tool (W) I selected only the background of the image. I did then click on Refine Edge to make the border along the hair look more natural and less choppy.
The next step was the key one and really how I thought I would go about making the photograph look more Jem-like and I knew how to do it entirely because of making mistakes in the past with my keyboard shortcut usage. I always use CMD-SHIFT-I to resize images before I post them on this site and Facebook, etc. Sometimes I end up hitting just CMD-I which is the Invert command in Photoshop. Since only the background was selected, only the background became inverted going from black to white and the bokeh from yellow to purple, which to me is much more Jem-like!
Next to clean up the image and make the model look more like Jem does, I used the Clone Stamp Tool (S) at 40% opacity and just sampled an area then brushed over that same area repeating as skin tone and texture changed for each part of the face. This is the quickest and easiest way I know of for smoothing skin. Note, I did not say it was the best, just the quickest and easiest.
To further the smooth and glowing look that Jem has, I used a free Photoshop action available here. That completed the look. I did not intend to tightly crop the image, but after all editing was done I thought a tighter crop was a better way to feature the image. I just hit C in Photoshop to bring up the Crop Tool.
Try this Jem-style process out on one of your photographs and post a link to the results in the comments below!
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Wednesday, January 11, 2012 at 3:21PM
Jason Collin
Yours truly leaping a chasm! This is a blending of 4 different action shots using a simple layer mask technique.In case you missed it last week, I do take time away from being behind the camera to continue my love of rock hopping and leaping objects (see here). I made the leap over the above chasm-ish span several times each time trying to go further. I did not actually move fast enough to be seen multiple times in 1/500th of a second. How I made the above image was to combine four of the shots taken in one burst of shots on my Nikon D300 (capable of 6 frames per second). Since the DSLR was on a tripod all the background matched up perfectly, as does the exposure since that was set manually. The only thing moving over the series of shots was me. Then, it was just a matter of using layer masks in Photoshop to produce the multiple exposure, or Matrix, looking image.
These shots layered on top of each other produced the above shot.Using layer masks to blend multiple images is not a difficult type of digital photography editing. I have written a tutorial on how to use layer masks here. Give this photography tip a try and post your results in the comments below!
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Wednesday, December 14, 2011 at 1:42PM
Jason Collin 
HDR photography and images are very popular right now. I, myself, have participated in a local exhibition featuring only HDR images. The thing is, I do not care for 90% of HDR photography I see. There is a large debate about processing HDR images to look more real or more hyper real. I am not referencing that debate here. For me, a simple reason why I do not find a vast majority of HDR images appealing is because they suffer from horrible shadow effects as demonstrated in the black clouds in the center image above. As you can see with the single exposure photo, the sky looks good, but there is no detail inside the glass. The 7-bracket HDR image reveals what is under the glass and adds better color, but at the expense of the clouds. Therefore, the best final results come from blending the single exposure photo with the 7-bracket HDR image.
1. click on add layer mask (sorry, shows vector) 2. click on layer 1 3. paint with a black brushBlending two images together is not a difficult time consuming process using Photoshop. The screenshots in this post are using CS5, but other versions should basically be the same.
First, open the single exposure photo and 7-bracket HDR image in Photoshop. Drag the 7-bracket HDR image on top of the single exposure photo. Once you do this you will only see the 7-bracket HDR image. The single exposure photo is completely hidden underneath. Our goal is to reveal only the parts of the single exposure photo we want, in this case, the clouds and sky.
After you have dragged the 7-bracket HDR image on top of the single exposure photo, follow the three steps highlighted in the screenshot above:

Now using the Brush tool at the settings described above, slowly brush the areas you want to reveal. The 7-bracket HDR image starts to disappear revealing the single exposure photo below. In the above screenshot you can see that I already revealed the nice white clouds on the right side. Here is an extra tip: I also used the Brush tool on the concrete wall of the building that looked too black & dirty to reveal the cleaner wall from the single exposure photo. If you make a mistake and reveal something you did not want to, set the Brush color to white and the top image will return.

Here again are the before and after results. By using a layer mask you can create a dynamic hdr image and still maintain the clean look of clouds, walls, etc in the image. This vector mask technique is great for other photography tricks too. Want to change the background on a portrait? You can do that following this same process! (see results here)
Try the vector mask process on some of your images and be sure to post links to the results in the comments below.
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Tuesday, September 27, 2011 at 5:19PM
Jason Collin
Using a layer mask in Photoshop CS5 to change the background of a portrait - book your lesson today to learn tomorrow!
I met Ed from Jacksonville again this morning for our second of two Photoshop CS5 centered DSLR Photography Lessons. After giving him a crash course on the basics of using many common Photoshop tools yesterday, today we focused mainly on one thing: layer masks. As seen in the image above, if you take a texture, drop it onto a portrait, create a layer mask, then "brush back in" the portrait, you have a very quick and easy way of completely changing the background of a photograph. You could also keep some of the texture visible over the portrait subject as well to create a different look to the entire frame.
This layer mask technique is also very useful for fixing clouds in HDR images, which often turn out too dark. Using one of my own HDR shots as an example, I showed Ed how you can get the benefit of an HDR image without the drawback (dark clouds) by taking a single frame of the bracketed shots that has very white clouds and using it as a layer mask to blend into the HDR image. I will be posting this tutorial using the HDR example later this week.
The four hours (total) I spent showing Ed what I know about Photoshop went by very fast. We easily could have filled another four. He took detailed notes so I am confident that with what he learned during our intensive lessons he will be able to apply to his own images and begin teaching himself how to use more features of Photoshop.
--Professional Model DSLR Photography Lessons now available!
Monday, September 26, 2011 at 5:19PM
Jason Collin
Grand Tetons photograph by Ed, editing by Jason - the lens correction filter in Photoshop CS5 sets things straight
I received a phone call from Ed all the way in Jacksonville (about 3 hours away) asking about taking extended 1-on-1 Photoshop CS5 lessons. I am not a certified Photoshop expert or anything like that so at first I wanted to make sure he was not looking to learn how to do something like someone's face and put it onto another person's body. My Photoshop skills lie mostly in the areas that pertain to editing digital photographs, not graphic design. After talking for a few minutes though I realized that what Ed wanted to learn I could most definitely teach. We booked two lesson sessions, one for today and another for tomorrow.
Ed had his own photos to use during the editing lesson and I was pleasantly surprised to see the Grand Tetons. Florida photographers of course have no local opportunities to photographs mountains of any kind. Ed's photographs already looked good, but there is almost always something that can be done to improve any photograph, and for sure any published or portfolio photograph by a serious hobbyist or a pro has had at least some editing done to it. I am not afraid to say that editing is often 50% responsible for the final look of a photograph.
The example above did not need that 50% level of editing. I showed Ed my workflow which starts with cropping (I cropped the photo even more here than I did during the lesson to better show the edits we made) and then removing any dust spots on the sensor that appear as dirt blemishes in the photo by using the healing brush (keyboard shortcut - j). Then I taught how to use the quick select tool (w) to highlight only the mountains for a contrast adjustment. Then the foreground grass and fence were selected for a color balance boost. Lastly, we used unsharp mask to increase the overall sharpness of the image resulting in more defined blades of grass and details in the fence and mountains.
Tomorrow we will move on to editing portraits and using layer masks.
--Professional Model DSLR Photography Lessons now available!