Photoshop: Half-Ass Your Way to Another Time of Day!

HEY! So - I'm by no means an expert in day to night photoshopping - but I thought this might be a nice chance to share an attempt at it with others.

Finding The Photo

So I was looking through some of my really old photos and I found some of my dogg, Raggs (shown right). He's a tiny little thing, and is about to celebrate his 18th. He's old, wise, and single. Athletic build, ladies.

OK so I grabbed one of my photos of him because I was looking for an outside photo for this experiment. I think the photo below does him alot of justice - since it's him in his natural, threatening form. I'm pretty sure this shot was taken minutes before he ambushed 12 cats (neighborhood record).

Chosen Photo

Anyways, lets start!

To begin, i removed any items I thought my distract from the scene. Those items are a basketball hoop, a bright red car, and a vicious man-beast.

Cloned Out Objects Photo

Next, I desaturated the whole scene, and boosted the contrast while lowering the brightness.

Desaturated Scene Photo

Next, I airbrushed over the ground-areas that i wanted shadowed. I did it in a dark green and set the layer mode to "Hard Light".

Grass Shadows Photo

So we have the ground area setup, now lets do some slight tweaking to items above the horizon line. I selected the top half and put it on its own layer. After that, I adjusted the shadow levels (shown below). Once done, I fade this layer into the background layer.

Tree Levels Photo

This part gets tricky, but I basically made a new layer, set it to multiply, and brushed in all the bright skylight coming through the trees. After that, I set this layer to 90% opacity so some light was available for adjusting later.

Light Removal Example

OK, highlights! I pulled out all areas that I wanted affected by some sort of light source - whether it be moon, street light, whatever. I duplicated certain areas, boosted the brightness and contrast, then blended them in. In some instances, I dodged the areas.

 Scene Lighting Example

Moon! (no, keep your pants up) - the next step was attaching a blue sogtlight layer to simulate a moon glow.

Moon Glow Photo

Moon again! I started adding it in by setting a bright blue circle to screen mode. Around it, I airbrushed a blue glow and set it to overlay. From here, we will see details emerge (hopefully!).

Overlay Lighting Photo

OK, now take your brush tool and spot around the areas of tree light surrounding the moon. Set this layer to Overlay.

Moon Light

Now I'm going to go through and highlight some edge areas. I chose, the rooftop, fencing, truck, wires, and trees (see below).

Scene Lighting Adjustments Photo

Final Touches!

Check the overall light levels. I merged all layers to a new one (CTRL+ALT+SHFT+E). From here I adjusted the contrast, added some new dodge-lighting, and enhanced some other little details.

In the end, I was left with this!

Final Photo

That's it, hope you liked it!
It certainly could use more work, but it was fun to experiment with...

Until next time,
signature

Also,
PS Quickie: Meteor Invasion!
Create A Freakish Zombie in 11 Steps!
A Quick Tsunami Photoshop Tutorial

Comments

Friday, Jun 22, 2007 / 1:31pm Patrick McPhail said…

That's amazing and everything, but I'm going to require additional shots of the dog.

Thanks.

Friday, Jun 22, 2007 / 2:08pm Katherine said…

I like it! It has a scary vibe to it! Kind of like camping in the woods at night :)

Comments have been turned off on this blog.
Read something more recent.

Statements and opinions expressed in this blog and any comments made are the private opinions of the respective poster, and, as such, iMarc LLC is neither responsible nor liable for such content.

Meet The Author

Craig Henry

Creative Director

Search

Recent Blog Posts

Recent Comments

  • Lunchroom Banter (Volume XX)

    Nick commented: Since Bill didn't do it, I will. "Oh snap!"

  • iMarcians with staying power

    Nick commented: Congratulations on the anniversaries. I had a professor tell me early on at the Art Institute that "you can expect to change web jobs every 2-3 years until you settle somewhere". I love proving this guy wrong every day. Congrats again.

  • Twitter, Alone, Is Not Customer Service

    Jay G commented: Same here, and my story is with Alaska Air, too. Their website said the customer service phone number was open something like 8am-8pm PST, but this was after hours, so I tweeted. Lo, and behold, I got a tweet response in 10 minutes with the 24/7 phone number. But this didn't change the confusion from their website…

  • Mobile browsers: Here's the data

    Robert Mohns commented: The data comes from visitors to iMarc.net — an important detail I forgot to include! — not the web as a whole. As for why so little Flash on mobile devices… I'd say this is because even Flash Lite is pretty resource intensive, and it's just not essential to the core content most people need to access. I don't think it has a lot to do…

  • Mobile browsers: Here's the data

    Jason Cronkhite commented: Robert, The data on Flash is interesting. What is your source? I am interested because of my interest in a live streaming company. Further, I'm curious why this is the case for Flash. Is there any merit to HTML5 that Jobs argues? Do you think this has anything to do with mobile network capacity for streaming…

We heart Visitors

  • iMarc
  • 14 Inn Street
  • Newburyport, MA 01950
  • Phone: (978) 462-8848
  • Fax: (978) 462-8807
  • Directions

Contact Us

Whether you have a huge project specification or just want to talk about updating your site, we’re here to help. Fill out the form, and we’ll get right back to you.

Contact Us
  • All Fields Required

Close