Tuesday, March 29, 2011

images for combining with clone stamp


clone stamp to combine images



1. Open Photoshop

2. Open your image by going to the File menu and selecting Open.

3. Choose File and click Open

(repeat steps 2 and 3 to open the additional file)

4. Make sure the Layers Palette is visible, if not go to Window - > Layers


(The image of people dancing will be your background layer. Make sure you size the images so that they are side by side and you can see both at the same time.

You will be using the Clone Stamp Tool to add parts from the other image to the background layer).


Create an empty layer above your background:

5. In the bottom of the layers palette click the square to "Create New Layer"

You should see a new empty layer above your background layer that is called "Layer 1"


Use the Clone Stamp Tool to add from the other image:

6. Select the Clone Stamp Tool from the Tool Palette (the stamp, keyboard shortcut is the letter S)

7. Choose the settings for the Stamp at the top

(size of brush = 200, hardness = 0%, opacity = 100%, flow = 100%)

8. Click on the second image (drinks & candles).

9. Hold down the ALT key (you will see the target appear while you hold down ALT)

10. Click on the candle. This is the area you would like to sample (you will be adding that area to the background image). You can let go after clicking once on the area.

11. Click on the background image. Make sure you are on Layer 1.

12. Click and hold down while you move the mouse to paint the candle onto Layer 1.

(you are using the clone stamp to sample from one image and paint on to the other image).



Use the Clone Stamp Tool again to add from another part of the other image:

13. Click on the second image (drinks & candles).

14. Hold down the ALT key (you will see the target appear while you hold down ALT)

15. Click on the beer bottle. This is the area you would like to sample (you will be adding that area to the background image). You can let go after clicking once on the area.

11. Click on the background image. Make sure you are on Layer 1.

12. Click and hold down while you move the mouse to paint the beer bottle onto the background image.

(again you are using the clone stamp to sample from one image and paint on to the other image).


You can continue to use the clone stamp to sample from the second image, adding onto layer 1 over the background image.


Use the eraser tool to clean-up some of the edges on Layer 1.


You can also adjust the Opactiy of layer 1 (select the top layer and then drag the opacity slider to the left.)


Use Marquee Tool + Free Transform (CNTRL + T or Command + T) to adjust the size of the new images on Layer 1. Click and drag the corners out to change the size. Hit the ENTER/RETURN key to apply the transformation.


You can use the Marquee Tool & the Move (it looks like an arrow and the shortcut is the letter V) to change the placement of the selections





Save the image:

Save your image by going to the File menu and Save As (Choose JPEG for finished images and PSD for unfinished images). For JPEG save the image at the highest size (Size 12).


***REMEMBER YOU CAN ALWAYS GO BACKWARDS ONE STEP WITH THE KEYBOARD SHORCUT CONTROL + Z or COMMAND + Z***


images for clone stamping





March 30: Clone Stamp

Clone Stamp

1. The clone stamp tool is located on your Photoshop toolbar.

If you do not see the toolbar (a vertical set of icons), go to window>tools to bring it up. Click the clone tool to select it.

The keyboard shortcut is (S)

2. Once on the Photoshop clone stamp tool, you can set your brush options (located at the top of the screen). Brush size and shape, opacity, flow and blending modes can all be selected. If you want to copy an exact area you will leave the opacity, flow and blending mode at their default settings and only choose a brush size and shape.

3. To select the area you want to copy from, move your mouse to the area you want to duplicate and Alt-click (Windows) or Option-click (Mac). The cursor will change to a target. Click the exact spot you want to start copying from.

4. Click and drag over the area you want to replace or correct and you will see the area you selected in step 3 start to "cover" your photo. Play around with different brush settings and try replacing different areas of your photo until you get the hang of it.