some where to learn these photoshop skills?

2014-07-09 8:09 pm
after watching the video of a Photoshop remake, i was motivated to learn some Photoshop skills, i've done fireworks, but not photoshop.
the view that i watched are the fabuliser videos:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RQuXwdl6k10
so i wanna learn to be able to do such things, i'm on summer holiday, so i've got time.
the minimum that i wanna be able to do is to but able to (like) take a picture of a person, then find clothes online, and then photoshop it into the picture, so make the person with a different hair style, and different clothes, and place it in the different background
it seems like alot of work, but i've done alot of post-process photo editing before, and the main parts would be cutting the objects, and then paste it on, and then smear the edges so that it blends.
oh, i've got photoshop CC
i've acctually tried it before already, but i can find things such as, (multi-poly crop tool; opacity brush; even just how to paste pictures on! damn it!)
the controls i find very in-traditional,
if you have leads to where can i learn how to do such stuff, please tell me. free would be the best.
thank you!

回答 (3)

2014-07-09 8:22 pm
✔ 最佳答案
I was going to say to get a good book on Photoshop and follow all the examples and exercises.

But you know how this stuff is done--what tools to use, where to find them, how to use them. So now it just takes a little practice to get the technique down pat.

It's VERY hard to put clothes on someone from a catalog. Much easier is just to switch the heads, and that's how it's usually done.

There are a gazillion tutorial vids on YouTube for Photoshop. But a 10 minute video can show you a trick or a technique, it can't really teach you how to use Photoshop because that's a lot more complicated and takes longer. Still these vids are helpful to learn a trick or two.

Also you don't smear edges to blend. If you want to superimpose someone's head on someone else's body, you cut-and-paste the head. I cut outside of the part that I want, then 'trim' it right down to the pixel with the eraser tool (if you zoom in and make the eraser very small, you can trim right up to the individual pixel! It's a little fussy and time-consuming, but it works great). Then you move the pasted layer, resize it, and 'transform' if necessary (as you see the guy doing with the crown in the video.) Then you might want to readjust brightness, contrast, 'levels', and even color saturation on one layer or other to get them to match better, before you merge the layers. You learn all about this by practice! The more you've done it, the easier it is, and the better the results look.
2014-07-11 6:44 pm
Check these 2 programs out

http://tinyurl.com/kruh587

http://tinyurl.com/k97j2ur

Love both of them
2014-07-09 11:02 pm
You can use my free eBook, it can be downloaded here for free: http://tinyurl.com/mhkfykj


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