View Full Version : How do you white wash a photo?
ZERO HEROES
Dec 14, 2008, 05:50 PM
I hired a guy to edit this photo I took. I'm doing some other photo editing and wanted to know how he white washed this photo. I guess that's the term used, correct me if I'm wrong.
http://www.zeroheroes.com/images/posters/fonttest5.jpg
Here is the before...
http://www.zeroheroes.com/images/posters/ZHposter-nowhite.jpg
irishgrizzly
Dec 15, 2008, 05:14 AM
I'm guessing you're talking about the flare effect behind of the woman? It's difficult to guess how much was created in PS and how much is part of the original photo.
To recreate this using the woman and the curtains you'd need to cut her out and paint a white glow in the layers in-between, using layers blending modes to soften and make it look realistic.
ZERO HEROES
Dec 16, 2008, 06:55 AM
I'm guessing you're talking about the flare effect behind of the woman? It's difficult to guess how much was created in PS and how much is part of the original photo.
To recreate this using the woman and the curtains you'd need to cut her out and paint a white glow in the layers in-between, using layers blending modes to soften and make it look realistic.
No, that was the easy part. I did that with the camera and putting a strobe in front of her and the curtain.
I'm talking about whitening the photo itself.
chrisbb
Dec 16, 2008, 08:22 AM
just create a new layer of pure white, then turn the opacity down to like 4 - 5% :)
Melrose
Dec 16, 2008, 09:39 AM
Brightness/Contrast can accomplish that as well..
Ad Pro
Dec 16, 2008, 04:15 PM
either create a layer filled with white and adjust the opacity.
Or in levels (image> adjustments> levels) move the left marker on the output levels slider to about 10.
rockdog
Dec 16, 2008, 10:48 PM
It might be helpful to see what the original looked like so there is some basis for comparison
stainlessliquid
Dec 17, 2008, 02:37 AM
Adjust the curves so the darkest blacks turn to gray. With the curve window open you can click on the picture to tell which value is where on the curve so you can adjust specific values without messing up other values.
I made the effect more extreme by just moving the bottom point diagonally up, you can also play with it more by adding more points and bending the curve so its more contrasty in the red or whatever.
Mydriasis
Dec 21, 2008, 04:31 AM
Definitely curves!
ZERO HEROES
Dec 22, 2008, 01:23 AM
Adjust the curves so the darkest blacks turn to gray. With the curve window open you can click on the picture to tell which value is where on the curve so you can adjust specific values without messing up other values.
I made the effect more extreme by just moving the bottom point diagonally up, you can also play with it more by adding more points and bending the curve so its more contrasty in the red or whatever.
Is there a tutorial on this?
ZERO HEROES
Dec 22, 2008, 01:36 AM
It might be helpful to see what the original looked like so there is some basis for comparison
Ok, I added it.
stainlessliquid
Dec 23, 2008, 05:41 PM
Is there a tutorial on this?
I dont know, you just go to image>adjustments>curves and move the bottom left point up along the diagonal line. His version has a lot of blue so he probably picked the blue channel from the drop down menu and messed with that the most. You can give it a colored tone by doing the channels individually, or give it an even gray tone by doing RGB.
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