Photoshop Contest PhotoshopContest.com
Creative Contests. Real Prizes. Essential Resource.
You are not logged in. Log in or Register

 


Photoshop Contest Forum Index - General Discussion - Making Miniatures - Reply to topic

Goto page 1, 2  Next

Post Mon Sep 18, 2006 9:44 am   Reply with quote         


.

I recently received a request to make an aerial photograph of a housing
development appear as if it were a miniature scale model.

I experimented with a number of techniques that produced acceptable results
but ended up finding a tutorial online for just this sort of thing.

It's super-easy and quite effective.

This is my first attempt - I followed the tutorial and added a few minor
tweaks:




Here's one that I found online which uses the same technique. I think it's
pretty cool:




Here's the tutorial. Give it a try...

http://recedinghairline.co.uk/tutorials/fakemodel/




marcoballistic

Location: I am everywhere, and Nowhere, but mostly, I am right here!

Post Mon Sep 18, 2006 9:51 am   Reply with quote         


ha ha Laughing thats cool, never would have thought of that, works quite well too. Nice one BC

a ha ha haaa sorry about the name error really my brain is not working today




billtvshow
Site Moderator

Location: North Carolina

Post Mon Sep 18, 2006 10:08 am   Reply with quote         


Well I'll be... cool!
Stevster

Location: Jacksonville FL

Post Mon Sep 18, 2006 10:11 am   Reply with quote         


interesting stuff...




Post Mon Sep 18, 2006 10:17 am   Reply with quote         


pretty cool look




TofuTheGreat

Location: Back where I belong.

Post Mon Sep 18, 2006 10:42 am   Reply with quote         


Friggin nifty effect. Off to look at the tut now. Very Happy




_________________
Why I do believe it's pants-less o'clock! - Lar deSouza
”The mind is like a parachute, it doesn’t work if it isn’t open.” - Frank Zappa
Created using photoshop and absolutely no talent. - reyrey

Paul Von Stetina

Location: Deep Shit

Post Mon Sep 18, 2006 12:12 pm   Reply with quote         


great shtuff badcop Rolling Eyes




Post Mon Sep 18, 2006 12:13 pm   Reply with quote         


I don't think the blur works on yours because of the angle of the picture.




Granulated

Location: London

Post Mon Sep 18, 2006 12:22 pm   Reply with quote         


badcop wrote:
.

This is my first attempt - I followed the tutorial and added a few minor
tweaks:





That's delicious. Did you use the classic gradient in a channel + lens blur on alpha1 technique or blur by hand ? Superb.




Post Mon Sep 18, 2006 12:31 pm   Reply with quote         


.
Death of a Clown wrote:
I don't think the blur works on yours because of the angle of the picture.

Hmmm
Initially I aligned the blur with the street angle but I found it lost it's miniature quality. Maybe it needs something more but I've already moved on to other miniatures.

Granulated wrote:
That's delicious. Did you use the classic gradient in a channel + lens blur on alpha1 technique or blur by hand ? Superb.

Thanks. I just used the quick mask lens blur exactly as specified in the tutorial.
I also used a bit of noise-->median here and there and raised the saturation to give it a more toy-like quality




Granulated

Location: London

Post Mon Sep 18, 2006 12:48 pm   Reply with quote         


badcop wrote:
.
Death of a Clown wrote:
I don't think the blur works on yours because of the angle of the picture.

Hmmm
Initially I aligned the blur with the street angle but I found it lost it's miniature quality. Maybe it needs something more but I've already moved on to other miniatures.

Granulated wrote:
That's delicious. Did you use the classic gradient in a channel + lens blur on alpha1 technique or blur by hand ? Superb.

Thanks. I just used the quick mask lens blur exactly as specified in the tutorial.
I also used a bit of noise-->median here and there and raised the saturation to give it a more toy-like quality



The tutorial here ? Personally, I was informed of the technique at a seminar in Vegas a couple of years ago.

One extra thing I do to try and achieve a realistic look is to add a radial gradient overlay using Screen and then adjust the perspective of the gradient layer to try and match the vanishing point angles (if that's what they're called!)




Granulated

Location: London

Post Mon Sep 18, 2006 12:54 pm   Reply with quote         


ahh sorry I followed your link and saw the aforementioned blur techinique advice.




jerry717

Location: Livonia, Michigan

Post Mon Sep 18, 2006 12:57 pm   Reply with quote         


That's pretty cool stuff. I make miniatures all the time, but mine are real. Wink






_________________
Contemplate this on the tree of woe. -Thulsa Doom

Granulated

Location: London

Post Mon Sep 18, 2006 1:01 pm   Reply with quote         


jerry717 wrote:
That's pretty cool stuff. I make miniatures all the time, but mine are real. Wink




Gorgeous




TofuTheGreat

Location: Back where I belong.

Post Tue Sep 19, 2006 8:25 pm   Reply with quote         


jerry717 wrote:
That's pretty cool stuff. I make miniatures all the time, but mine are real. Wink




Hey since those are next to dimes does that make those "D" cups? Laughing

Anyway my attempts. Not great but still cool:







_________________
Why I do believe it's pants-less o'clock! - Lar deSouza
”The mind is like a parachute, it doesn’t work if it isn’t open.” - Frank Zappa
Created using photoshop and absolutely no talent. - reyrey

Goto page 1, 2  Next

Photoshop Contest Forum Index - General Discussion - Making Miniatures - Reply to topic

You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum


Navigate PSC
Contests open  completed  winners  prizes  events  rules  rss 
Galleries votes  authentic  skillful  funny  creative  theme  winners 
Interact register  log in/out  forum  chat  user lookup  contact 
Stats monthly leaders  hall of fame  record holders 
PSC advantage  news (rss)  faq  about  links  contact  home 
Help faq  search  new users  tutorials  contact  password 

Adobe, the Adobe logo, Adobe Photoshop, Creative Suite and Illustrator are registered trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated.
Text and images copyright © 2000-2006 Photoshop Contest. All rights reserved.
A venture of ExpertRating.com