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[OM] Re: MooseChuck [was Re: Portrait PP, Objective, or Subjective]

Subject: [OM] Re: MooseChuck [was Re: Portrait PP, Objective, or Subjective]
From: Chuck Norcutt <chucknorcutt@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Thu, 27 Mar 2008 06:40:59 -0400
Thanks.  I knew if I posted something very detailed I'd likely learn 
some new tricks.  CTRL-I I knew about but always forget.

Chuck Norcutt

Moose wrote:
> Ok. As a now collaborative effort, should this be called the MooseChuck 
> technique?
> 
> How much Moose could a MooseChuck chuck if a MooseChuck could chuck Moose.?
> 
> Chuck Norcutt wrote:
>> Detailed instructions for Moose's method except as modified to start with 
>> the original images as raw files in ACR:
>>
>> Process the original raw image in ACR to look as your original but adjust 
>> the color temperature slider to get the hair and eye color the way you want 
>> it.  Pass the competed image to PhotoShop which will be a 16 bit image.  
>> Select that image and on its layers palette duplicate the background layer.  
>> Before closing the duplicate pop-up window rename this layer "Cool" or 
>> something else meaningful.  Adjust the image magnification down such that 
>> you have space to show two images of this 
>> size about 30-50% overlapped and position the image toward the right side of 
>> the screen.
>>   
> I don't bother with all this sizing and positioning. Doesn't hurt,but 
> doesn't matter, either.
>> Now reprocess the original raw file in ACR again but this time adjust the 
>> temperature slider to give the appropriate warm tone to the skin. Don't 
>> worry about the hair, eyes or teeth.  Pass the ompleted image to PhotoShop 
>> and select it.  Your original layers palette will disappear for the moment 
>> to be replaced by the one from the warm image.  Slide the warm image to the 
>> far left such that it's right side is overlapping the cool image.  Press 
>> CTRL-A on a PC or whatever you press on a Mac to "select all".  The warm 
>> image should now be surrounded by "marching ants" indicating that the entire 
>> image has been selected.  
> This is not necessary. With no selection made, the move tool will copy 
> the whole image across.
>> Select the "move tool" (northwest pointing arrow beside a cross), put it on 
>> the warm image and click and hold the mouse button.  While holding the mouse 
>> button move/slide the warm image over onto the cool image.  When the move 
>> tool pointer is well onto the cool image release the mouse button and then 
>> reselect the cool image so you can see all of it.  Then use the move tool 
>> again to accurately align the warm image directly over the cool image.  
> Big time saver. Hold down the shift key while using the move tool to 
> pull a copy across and release the mouse button before the shift key. 
> The new layer will be perfectly aligned with the image in the other 
> window. No need to do any alignment.
>> If you now look at the layers palette you will see that the warm image has 
>> been added as its own layer above the cool image.  Click on the "eyeball" on 
>> the warm layer to turn it off and see the cool layer underneath and to check 
>> the alignment. Click on "Layer properties" and change the name of this layer 
>> to "warm".
>>
>> Now click on the "add layer mask" icon on the bottom of the layers palette 
>> (the one that looks like a camera) to add a layer mask on the warm layer.  
>> Change the magnification of the image such that you can see all of the hair. 
>>  Select black paint at the bottom of the tool bar and then select a 
>> feathered brush with a diameter about the size of the width of the eye.  Set 
>> the opacity and flow to about 40%.  Make sure the mask is selected and then 
>> start brushing the hair with black paint.  The 
>> silvery hair from the cool image will now start showing through.  Keep 
>> brushing until the warm hair layer is masked away revealing the silver hair 
>> underneath.  Reduce the size of the brush to about pupil size or smaller and 
>> brush over the whites and pupils of the eyes in the same way.
>>
>> I think Bill Barber has suggested using the "eraser" tool for something 
>> similar but painting on a mask is better. If you make a mistake painting on 
>> a mask you can easily undo the mistake by changing the paint to white and 
>> brushing over the mistake.
>>
>> Now to treat the wrinkles.  While holding the ALT or Option key down select 
>> Layers -> Merge Visible
> Shortcut. CTRL-SHIFT-E
>> and release the mouse button.  This is called "stamping" and PS will merge 
>> all the visible layers into a new top layer.  Name this layer "sharp".  Then 
>> duplicate this layer and name is "Smooth".  Then select Filter -> Blur -> 
>> Gaussian Blur (or the blur filter of your choice) and set the radius such 
>> that the blur diminishes the wrinkles to your liking.  Don't pay any mind to 
>> the fact that the 
>> entire image is blurred.  Then add a mask to the smooth layer and with mask 
>> selected, take the paint bucket with black paint and pour it over the mask.  
>> This will completely uncover the "sharp" layer below.
>>   
> Another shortcut. When you add a mask to a layer, it is white and 
> selected, a simple CRTL-I inverts it to black. Fewer steps to the same 
> result.
>> Now take the paint brush with 50-60% opacity and flow and use white paint to 
>> start painting over the wrinkled skin areas that need softening. 
> Here it becomes a matter of style of working. I would probably use a 
> quite soft, modest size brush with 100% opacity and something under 20% 
> flow. Up around the bangs, I'd switch to a harder, smaller brush.
>> If you make a mistake and start reproducing that 23 year old bunny then 
>> switch back to black paint and undo the mistake.
>>
>> Now you're done except for flattening the image, and resizing and sharpening 
>> for a print.
>>   
> In both cases of mask painting, the bangs are going to be a potential 
> problem on a larger image. I might well use Select=>Color Range and 
> select for the skin color range, use the Lasso tool in delete mode to 
> un-select all but the bangs area, and fill the selection with white or 
> gray. Well, I'd actually likely do this on another duplicate layer, 
> delete the existing layer mask, create a new one using the selection, 
> adjust opacity and blending. If done for color, retain the bangs layer 
> to reuse the mask layer later on the smoothing layer. Later merge the 
> bangs layers into the ones below them, choosing to retain the lower 
> layer mask in the dialog box that pops up.
> 
> You can drag and copy masks between layers. Drag while holding down the 
> Alt key to duplicate a mask onto another layer.
> 
> Moose
> 
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