Thank you to everyone that shared their opinions on how I achieved the Spiraling Out effect in my first Exercise in Photoshop Forensics post. I definitely think it was successful enough that I’ll do another one in the future but for now let’s get to the solution!
Ofir Abe’s description was correct in his guess about my technique, which was to process multiple iterations of one image (using Adobe Lightroom) and exporting each version to Photoshop where I exposed different parts of each image using layer masks. Why do it in Lightroom rather than adjustment layers? Well, it’s a matter of bit depth and tonal range and pre/post demosaicing… by doing it in a RAW file I have access to ALL the data the camera captured, whereas if I converted it to a JPG/TIFF/PSD first then the file has doesn’t have access to all the data captured by the camera – especially if it’s been converted it to an 8-bit file. Now if you convert it to a 16-bit file then that’s better, but if you ask me it’s still better to make all the adjustments before locking in your settings and exporting it to a JPG/TIFF/PSD. By making the changes in a RAW editor (like Lightroom, Aperture, Adobe ACR) you have more power in your exposure, saturation, white balance, tonal curves etc.
To sum up for all you non-technical folks, shoot in RAW (rather than JPG) and use a RAW editor to make any color or exposure adjustments to your image, then thank me later. Sure there are some downsides to using RAW – specifically they are a larger file size and take longer for your camera to process, but for 99% of the projects I work on RAW is so far superior it’s not even a question on what should be used. RAW is most akin to a digital negative whereas JPG is akin to a digital print. In a print/JPG what you see is what you get, there is no extra detail that can be extracted. But in a negative/RAW file there is a lot of non-visible detail that can be extracted, if you know how.
But onto the step by step process of how I created them!
Straight out of the Camera
Using a classic lighting technique for beauty photography (over/under softboxes) we get a nice even lighting that provides a perfect palette to paint shapes on.
If you think it’s easy to get hair to look this perfect think again, Janae Johnson had to spend a long, long time perfecting nearly every single strand! Lucky for me Paula Dahlberg’s incredible makeup skills combined with Sarah’s statuesque looks makes for an easy retouching job, making this out-of-camera shot nearly too perfect for a “before” image… yet that’s exactly what it is.
First Lightroom Export to Photoshop
Basically I wanted to shift the entire color palette around making her skin a near-neutral white. To do this I adjust the Temp/Tint along with the exposure, vibrance and saturation sliders in Adobe Lightroom. I would give the exact values I shifted but they wouldn’t translate correctly to an image with a different starting point so if you are truly interested in experimenting then you’re going to have to do just that, experiment!
Obviously shifting the yellow in her skin to white requires adding a blue hue to the entire image which is how the white wall changes to blue. Once the image was brought to this point I exported it to photoshop where it became the bottom layer soon to be joined by…
Second Lightroom Export to Photoshop
I loved the blue shift on the entire image and how it created an understated quality to it but I wanted to bring back some vibrancy to the hair, which I would later match the color of the patterns with. So I brought the color balance back to where it needed to be but this time I increased the vibrance and saturation in all the colors to give it all an other-worldly pop in saturation.
First Layer Mask
This step is simple, I overlaid the new vibrant layer onto the first layer and using a layer mask I hid everything and “painted” back her hair and a white gradient into the blue-ish background. Incidentally, I did all the masking by hand using a very precise Razer mouse. I’ve seen some promising shortcuts but nothing beats good old fashioned manual masking… though it seems CS5 may have made some progress in smartly refining masks… but I didn’t use their new tools for this, just good old fashioned painted on mask.
Third (and final) Lighroom Export to Photoshop
Basically I adjusted the white balance to get a color that matched the hair, then I dropped the exposure way down which made an all around darker tone, using the tone curve in Lightroom I brought the highlights up a bit to give it a more shiny appearance rather than just a darker appearance.
Second (and Final) Layer Mask
Using only the default brush set in photoshop I hand-drew all these shapes, once again using a highly precise Razer Mouse. It will be stated (I’m sure) that I should have used the pen tool and created the shapes using bezier curves which would have resulted in a much cleaner vector shapes. Though I am quite proficient with bezier curves (from my days as an Adobe Illustrator guru) I find whenever I’m creating vector shapes they lose a certain organic appeal, all the curves become a little too precise, a little too polished. For that reason I opted for the old fashioned process of simply painting in the crazy shapes and allowing my imagination to stay less focused on the details.
A look at the Layers
Here is a closer look at what my final PSD looked like, notice I added a heal layer so that I could do some slight touch up on the hair fly-aways, other than that you can see the three images with the two layer masks. Very simple.
Thoughts or Questions?
I’d love to hear them! Leave a comment and I’ll respond, and if you liked this series of blog posts on Photoshop Forensics let me know because I could definitely be talked into doing more in the future!
I dont post much on your blogs or FB, but I have to today! Thank you so much for sharing this, a lot of photographers whom edit there own images don’t give a lot up on there “tricks n treats” and lets face it, in the Fashion/Beauty industry it’s all about the post editing that is getting attention the last few years ( a lot of debate on the topic). Do not want to get of topic other then saying thank you so much for this, it’s super cool to watch your videos, read your blog and really see how things are done. I can’t wait to come to one of your workshops.
Much respect
~B~
This is awesome! I don’t have photoshop skills near as cool as this, but I might try playing around with this!
Thank you for this inspirational blog. Recently I have been experimenting with multiple copies as layers from Lightroom to achieve different skin tones. You have saved me (and probably many other photographers) many late hours.
Thans again for sharing.
BB
Very informative post Jake. Great blog. A consistent source of genuinely valuable information. Thanks for sharing.
Fantastic Jake. Thanks.
You left off on the idea of allowing your imagination to stay less focused, does this also apply in your approach to achieving the end result? Err, less convoluted, did you have the final image in mind when you started or was it a less focused approach? Thanks.
@Kim S.
In this case I did have an idea of what the final images were going to look like before the models even showed up for styling. Kind of a funny story – one of the models was visiting from LA and excited to do a crazy shoot and seemed very sad that we were shooting such a simple beauty look, I kept assuring her they were going to be much cooler when finished but it was the first time we worked together so I’m not sure she believed what I was telling her. I think she believes me now though. 🙂
Thanks so much for sharing the behind the scenes stuff!
Wow, that’s awesome, and something I’d never thought of at all. Thanks for sharing, it was very eye opening.
right on 🙂
this is very cool of you to reveal backstage PP (post production, not penis)
i use this method a lot even for small things like making the eyes pop and a dramatic dark shot.
and this inspired me to soon reveal the backstage on like how i made this shot:
http://ofirabe.deviantart.com/art/THE-ISLAND-S-01-ep-01-159491104
i’d be happy to have you (jake) analyze this too, though i’m sure you know cuz you’re an experienced photog.
Jake,
Do you think it would be possible to use the RAW options in photoshop cs4 instead of lightroom to do the same thing?
Michelle – yes! 🙂
thank you for sharing Jake! I’d be very interested in continued posts like this- even though I don’t work with models or in fashion, the theory and ideas transfer over… I’m already full of ideas for where this method would come in very useful in my own work.
Something I’ve been meaning to ask you, do you see Senior portraits heading closer into this sort of image? Girls especially seem to want more fashion based images than they did when I was in high school. I’ve really been thinking about a potential business move to introduce a higher fashion approach to senior photos.
@Trishia,
Girls definitely seem very interested in having more fashion forward images for their senior portraits, what’s yet to be seen is if this will just be a temporary trend or something that is more permanent. I tend to think it will be a trend that is here to stay for a long time mainly because 10 years ago nobody but family members really saw senior portraits but facebook changed all that, now EVERYONE sees the portraits so more and more girls care about the quality of the images and stuff similar to what they see in magazines is just what they want!
Thanks , I have recently been searching for information about this topic for ages and yours is the best I’ve discovered till now. But, what about the conclusion? Are you sure about the source?
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