The trouble with having a moody style is getting it all to translate once there is A) compression and B) the file is being viewed at anything other than full screen. I was losing his right arm (camera left) for a while. Must have exported the jpeg at least 10 times. All that annoying last minute tweaking.
Love them both. Great work. Were the wardrobe accessories purposeless selected to match the backdrop or was that just a happy coincidence? (camo shirt in the first, and the feather in the second)
The wonders of photo magic. I'm glad you asked this question, as it makes me feel better about my work, let me tell you why:
They're both composites, the first composites that I've really ever done and then released. I just looked around online for textures. Basically they're both "cement/concrete textures" I found while searching online. Bing has a "free to modify, share, and use commercially" filter as part of it's image search engine so I looked around and grabbed things that were appealing to me and were of 'sufficient' resolution.
So to answer your question, yes, the backgrounds were selected to match the visual style I was looking for, and to match what they were wearing. As was the color. However, they were wearing whatever they were wearing. I didn't choose their wardrobe. They're both artists. Mark Minor especially really crafts his "looks" when he goes out. Lots of accessories, lots of hats, lots of layers.
After I selected which textures I was going to use, I used gaussian blur appropriately to infer the shallow depth of field I was using, as well as making the background feel as though it had a bit of distance from the subject. Then using the color picker and blending modes I altered the colors of the cement. In both cases, I picked the color to match the subject. Then I used another layer and blending mode to add a "lighting effect". And finally to really make the background feel as though it were part of the image, I created a shadow by using the person selection, filling it in with black, using gaussian blur to make it feel organic, and finishing it off with yet another blending mode. I used other other small details that I've never tried before as well, such as adding noise to the background and blurring it.
The nice thing is that with Photoshop, I can alter any one of those layers. It was done 100% non-destructively. Handy of course as obviously I spent an inordinate amount of time tweaking it. Now that I've created the workflow though, doing it again is pretty quick. Figuring out how to make it look right was the real trick. Believe it or not, all of this stuff really isn't complicated, it was a bit time consuming though.
I'm still learning about compositing. I'd really like to get to the level where I can really take an image of a location, and an image of a person and marry them together. That takes a lot of work/knowledge but can be a critical skill to gain jobs. I don't really want to become a "composite specialist" though. I think I'll always prefer to be on location for a shoot, but that can't always be done. Knowing these other tools is really useful.
/snip
Japanese maple tree
sorry to hear about this picture / identity theft.
hope everything turns out well for you!
Hoping everything work out for you EQ.
Love them all but these 3 are my faves.Thanks for the support! It's resolved, wont detail how, but he's been dealt with accordingly. In the end, I didnt really lose anything, but it's a firm reminder that slimebags exist on this planet.
A selection of the best from the past couple of weeks
Atlantis by Empty Quarter, on Flickr
Complex by Empty Quarter, on Flickr
Ratio by Empty Quarter, on Flickr
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