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I have tried to get rid of this blue corner, with the Clone Tool but it turns out sloppy. What can I do? It should have the fabric pattern there.
Hi
Like it or not, I don't think you are going to avoid a bit of cloning. Remember you can flip the clone stamp vertically/horizontally as you sample and stamp.
Dave
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I cannot make out that specific part of the pattern in the rest of the image so where should it come from?
If you don’t have other images available I suppose you could use the part to the left of the cat’s head (as a Smart object preferably) and use Adjustment Layers to amend its brightness and color.
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Hi
Like it or not, I don't think you are going to avoid a bit of cloning. Remember you can flip the clone stamp vertically/horizontally as you sample and stamp.
Dave
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Nice retouching, Dave!
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Very well done!
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I can't get over what you did...it looks great, what a beautiful job you did!
Can I have my retouched photo back?
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Amy, show us what you have so far following Dave's directions with layers.
Notice the original layer is duplicated and there is a layer mask.
The next layer is the Shadow layer, which is selected so we can see it is set to Multiply with a drop in Opacity.
The cloning is on its own layer, and Dave gave a big hint about flipping it. I will tuck nicely under the top cat layer.
The original image is sitting at the bottom, untouched.
What part do you need help with?
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Sorry for the late reply.
I'm not as proficient at understanding the directions as I thought I was and took all the information over to my local camera store. They knew what David had done but being in the shop working they couldn't really devote too much time for me. However, they're holding a 3-day Photoshop workshop in April and I will get the attention I need then.
I can't tell you how brilliantly I think David's fixing up of my shot looks; but I have to learn how to do it myself.
Thank you for all your help.
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Hi
Getting some training is a great way to go forward.
I didn't keep the demo I did in the earlier post (for forum demos I tend just to do them, post them, then delete). However if you are having a try yourself and get stuck just post on the forum and I or others here will try and help you.
I was not sure how experienced you were when I posted earlier , so I will try and expand on my comments.
When you use the clone stamp tool you normally sample an area then paint onto another area. The cloned painting is shifted and the same way round as the source image. However if you go to the Clone Source panel (open it using menu Window >Clone Source) you can click to reverse the cloned image horizontally or vertically as you paint. That is how I painted the right side with a mirror image of the left side.
As you can hopefully see in the earlier post, I tend to do this cloning onto an empty layer , that way it is easy to correct or go back simply by erasing the cloned image on the blank layer.
At the top is a duplicate of the original image but with a mask. When a mask is added to a layer, where the mask is white the layer pixels are visible, where the mask is black then the layer pixels are transparent and the layer(s) below show through. So in this case it shows the cat on the top layer but the cushion area is transparent allowing the cloned and original layers to show through.
Finally I brushed the shadows onto an empty layer with a soft brush. This adds a bit of realism. The layer is set to multiply which means that it will darken the image below it.
I hope that helps you to get started
Dave
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Sorry to bother you 3 months later but I finally, after a few tries, got this far with my image. I just need to learn how to put in the drop shadow. I'm having difficulty with it. Thank you.
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Hi
Nice job with the cloning
The shadow was on a layer below the cat. Rather than using a drop shadow from layer styles, in the demo I painted the shadow.
Add a new layer, directly under the masked cat, and set the blending mode of that layer to multiply (in the layers panel) . Take a soft round brush (0% hardness) and in the options bar set it to low opacity (10-15%). Now gently brush in some black. You will need a few strokes to build up a realistic shadow. The darkest shadow should be closest to the cat. Don't overdo it though and when done you can turn down the opacity of the shadow layer in the layers panel. In the earlier post I reduced it to 93% which to my eye just looked right for the shadows that I painted - but the value that looks right with your painted shadow might be different.
Please post back when you have done it - it's good to see a forum answer being followed up.
Dave
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I just tried to add the shadow. I had saved the image as a psd and a jpeg
from a couple days ago when I was working on it. I could not get the
shadow to work, is it because the image was saved? I had a shadow layer on
the psd, which did not work and then I added one, like your directions and
that did not work. I would hate to start the whole image all over again.
I can follow your directions but it is just not working. Also, do you know
what I can do with that little bit of blue under my cat's arm near the far
right of the image; it won't clone or spot heal?
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JPGs don't support layers. Are you trying it with the PSD?
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yes, I was. When I was creating the image it was saved as a psd. Then I
re-saved it again as a jpeg. So I have both.
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Hi
As Jane-e says, jpegs don't save layers so don't save your edits as a jpeg. Keep jpeg for exporting a finished copy if you want to sent it on.
Your PSD file should contain the layers. Can you open the PSD and take a screenshot of the layers panel and image with the shadow layer selected in the layers panel. Hopefully we will be able to see what is happening and help you out
Dave
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I just about finished it. I figured out the Shadow. It was done so
lightly at first until I started sliding the opacity slider back and forth,
then it showed up; so it was me and not your directions.
I did have to go back to the layer mask and feather the selection a bit
because it had looked too choppy and separated, like I had pasted the image
of the cat onto the background.
Then I just touched it up a little more with the clone stamp and added a
little contrast to deepen the colors a bit. I think it looks pretty good
although I would like to get rid of that very slight blue glow under his
left leg on the right.
On Mon, Jun 11, 2018 at 11:22 AM, Amy Bellezza <amybellezza@gmail.com>
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Hi
That little bit of blue could be taken out by adjusting the mask on the cat.
If you click on a mask in the layers panel you can paint directly on it with white (to show what is on the associated layer ) or black (to hide the layer).
So you want to hide the blue. Get a small soft brush , click on the mask in the layers panel and paint on the blue area with black. Remember it is the mask that you are actually painting on, not the image - so the layer underneath will start to show. If you go too far switch to a white brush and restore the cat layer
Dave
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Here is the original. The bottom image is what I came up with. This is
the best I could do, its still there a bit. I was thinking of turning the
photo into black & white anyway.
I hesitated to tell you but my cat's name is Euro. Euro "Steve"
Faithful-Friends.
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Now I don't know how well this will work, but there's a trick fore using Content Aware Fill in this situation, and that is to copy just the areas you want to be sourced from, to a new layer, like this
I can see I have missed a bit in the image above, but I have fixed it below. So fingers crossed for a half decent result
Not too bad, but I used two goes with Content Aware Fill, removing some of the selection for the second pass.
When doing stuff like this, I like to copy the mail subject to a new layer, and move it to the top of the stack so that the fixes are overlapped underneath it. This gives you other options like increasing the size of the cat or subject to increase its overlapping the fixed area. I'd do a bit of work matching the tones as well, but You'll know how to do that.