Adobe Photoshop CC For Dummies
Book image
Explore Book Buy On Amazon
When cleaning up photos in Photoshop CC, large challenges sometime require drastic measures, such as duplicate layers and layer masks. Take a look at the following figure. At the top left, you see the “before” photo: at the top right, the “after” image. Below are images from three key steps in the process.

image0.jpg

Here are the steps taken to remove the boy from the group photo:

  1. Decide what needs to go and how best to cover it.

    In this case, the young man is no longer welcome in the group photo. The easiest way to remove him (without using scissors and leaving an empty hole) is to move the two young women on the right over to the left.

  2. Make a selection of the area that you’ll use to cover.

    A large rectangular selection is used, which included everything to the right of the young man. Be careful to include everything you’ll need in the altered image. In this case, the girl’s hair is on the boy’s shirt. Remember you can always make a rough selection with one tool and then press and hold Shift to add to the selection with another tool, or press Option/Alt to remove part of the selection.

  3. Copy the selection to a new layer.

    Use the keyboard shortcut Command+J/Ctrl+J to copy the selection to a new layer.

  4. Position the new layer.

    Use the Move tool to slide the new layer over the top of the area you want to remove.

  5. Add a layer mask.

    Click the Add Layer Mask button at the bottom of the Layers panel and then paint with black in the layer mask to hide areas of the upper layer. As you can see in the lower left in the figure, the upper layer covers areas of the lower layer that need to show (such as the man’s head), creating an unnatural shadow pattern.

    The layer mask in the lower-center image exposes as much of the lower layer as possible, leaving the upper layer visible only where necessary to show the two young women and their shadows as well as to hide the people on the lower layer.

  6. Look for and adjust anomalies.

    In the lower center of the figure, you see that one woman’s foot should be in the man’s shadow. A new layer is added, and a selection is made of the area that should be in shadow, which is filled with the color of the toes that are already in shadow.

    Then use the Multiply blending mode and the Opacity slider to match the original shadow. (See the lower-right image in the figure.)

  7. Crop.

    Glancing again at the lower-center image in the figure, you see the area that needs to be cropped, off to the right. Using the rectangular Marquee tool, make a selection of everything you want to save. Then use the Image→Crop command, and the alteration is complete.

  8. Save the image.I suggest you save the image with a different name in case you ever need the unaltered image again.

About This Article

This article is from the book:

About the book author:

Peter Bauer is an award-winning photographer and contributing writer for Photoshop User and Layers magazines. He is best known as the Help Desk Director for the National Association of Photoshop Professionals (NAPP), but he has also authored or coauthored a dozen books on Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, computer graphics, and photography.

This article can be found in the category: