View Full Version : Putting gloves on invisichik
coldclimb
Jul-14-2005, 07:45 PM
OK all, here's one I don't even know where to begin with. Everyone meet Invisichik. She is a creation of my own as of a few minutes ago. She likes to walk slacklines in the spring, hang out in cozy cabins, and generally just about anything I want her to do. http://dgrin.com/images/smilies/icon10.gif She has a problem though.
As you can (or can't) see in the image below, the fact that she has no visible arms sort of knocks off the balance of the framing. To compensate for this, I'm considering giving her a pair of gloves. This is where I'm stuck.
Can anyone, using photoshop or PSP and without stealing external source images, put gloves on this girl? Or what about a better idea? Is there something easier that I'm missing?
Edit: Oh, and in case you're wondering, the original is here. (http://www.morffed.com/2005.php?action=slideshow&image=slacklining05)
Here's the resized photo:
coldclimb
Jul-14-2005, 07:45 PM
And here's one hand....
coldclimb
Jul-14-2005, 07:46 PM
And here's the other. Thanks for any help anyone can offer!
behr655
Jul-14-2005, 08:30 PM
This may not count if you concider the original shot an outside source.
http://behr655.smugmug.com/photos/28421316-L.jpg
Bear
coldclimb
Jul-14-2005, 10:50 PM
Yeah, that's what I'm sorta going for there, except slightly more realistic. Are you just painting over the hands and working to make them look good, or is there a series of affects one can apply to the skin that will work well?
behr655
Jul-15-2005, 04:09 AM
Yeah, that's what I'm sorta going for there, except slightly more realistic. Are you just painting over the hands and working to make them look good, or is there a series of affects one can apply to the skin that will work well?
Yes, I selected the hands from the original shot, de-saturated and darkened them. Then I cut and pasted them onto invisichik. The selection was of the pair of hands and using visual cues in the photo was able to place them pretty dang close to where they belong. It would be easy to change the color of the gloves or even turn them into mittens.
I'm more interested in how you did the original manipulation. Is the "original" actually a composit?
Bear
Agilehound
Jul-15-2005, 09:04 AM
Cool idea!! I totally missed the gloves though . . . even when I knew I should be looking for gloves I thought they were something laying in the snow. (I'm admittedly a simple person, although not *that* much simpler than the next. ;) )
Do you think having her cast a shadow with arms/head/etc would help?
coldclimb
Jul-15-2005, 12:24 PM
Yes, I selected the hands from the original shot, de-saturated and darkened them. Then I cut and pasted them onto invisichik. The selection was of the pair of hands and using visual cues in the photo was able to place them pretty dang close to where they belong. It would be easy to change the color of the gloves or even turn them into mittens.
I'm more interested in how you did the original manipulation. Is the "original" actually a composit?
Bear
Thanks man I'll give it a shot that way and see what I can do.
As for the manipulation, it was mostly cloning. I had five shots in the series, and one of them had quite a bit of the two people in the background on it, so I copied that over the top of her arm in this one, cloned in some edges, and adjusted colors to make it blend well. Then I worked some to clone in the left half of the background girl, which you can tell if you look closely. The rest of the erasing was simple cloning in of mountain background over the arms and face (a shame I had to destroy such a pretty face) which went smoothly. Then I cloned in parts of her shirt onto the shoulder and back, smoothed up some good edges, and hemmed the shirt with a bit of mild burning. Next was the necklace, I just copied, flipped, and mirrored what I could see, and blended the two halves together. The little dragonfly necklace was tougher, as it's so thin that it was all skin colored, so I had to desaturate that, and I'm debating removing it altogether.
Agilehound: I'm torn about the shadows. Her arm already casts a shadow on her side, and her head onto her shoulder, but really she shouldn't be casting shadow at all. Removing those would be really tough though, I'm not sure if I could do it well. As for shadows on the ground, they'd be out of the picture normally, so I'm leaving that out.
Thanks for checking this out! http://dgrin.com/images/smilies/icon10.gif
XO-Studios
Jul-18-2005, 08:57 AM
OK
Stealing about 10 minutes of my boss' time (i.e. I am on the clock)
Below is what I did.
Take both hands, and put them on seperate layers.
Enlarge them to 120% (To show bulk of gloves)
Duplicate both layers again
Select a layer, fill with color of choice.
Change blend mode of original hand on top to luminosity
Erase part of that layer to show band on gloves.
Could do better, but for 10 minutes not bad at all, if I had more time I would not fill with a solid color but maybe a pattern fill.
FWIW,
XO,
coldclimb
Jul-19-2005, 03:08 AM
Excellent stuff, thanks! I still haven't made the time to do this yet, but it'll happen sometime soon and I'll finish up this pic. Thanks again for the help!http://dgrin.com/images/smilies/thumb.gif
coldclimb
Jul-21-2005, 09:35 PM
Okay, here's my attempt. If you spot something blatantly fixable with it, please let me know so I can fix it. If not, then I'll be sticking with this. Not too perfect, but it's recognizable. Let me know what you think, and thanks for all the help!
Couldn't decide what color, so I went with all of them. http://dgrin.com/images/smilies/icon10.gif
cletus
Jul-22-2005, 06:15 AM
Okay, here's my attempt. If you spot something blatantly fixable with it, please let me know so I can fix it. If not, then I'll be sticking with this. Not too perfect, but it's recognizable. Let me know what you think, and thanks for all the help!
Couldn't decide what color, so I went with all of them. http://dgrin.com/images/smilies/icon10.gif
:thumb looks good!
gluwater
Jul-22-2005, 07:46 AM
I think the multi-colored gloves look more realistic than a solid color because a solid color would need a lot of shadowing to look real and that would be kinda time consuming. Good work!
coldclimb
Jul-22-2005, 04:35 PM
I think the multi-colored gloves look more realistic than a solid color because a solid color would need a lot of shadowing to look real and that would be kinda time consuming. Good work!
Yeah this was what I found as well. I tried a few solid colors and couldn't get it to satisfy me.
Thanks for the comments and help all! http://dgrin.com/images/smilies/thumb.gif
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