beestripe
10-03-2007, 05:04 AM
I have wedding photo where the bridal party is walking down a path. I want to Lens Blur the backround by creating a gradient mask leading away behind her up the path, but keep the bridal party sharp in the foreground.
Normally I would do this by:
- Creating a gradient in quick mask and hard brush the subject in the mask I want to keep sharp.
- Then save the mask as an alpha channel and choose it as the Depth Map in the Lens Blur options.
Problem is, this somewhat crude technique can be limiting if you want to change either the gradient or the main subject selection and often means you need to start all over again.
Ideally it would be best if I could combine alpha channels (in this case a foreground mask and a gradient mask) in to one mask for the Lens Blur Depth Map.
It's been fruitless with my google enquiries, any suggestions?
TIA
mistermonday
10-03-2007, 08:15 AM
TIA, you can add alpha channels together. Go Select > Load Selection. Choose the alpha channel you want. Then Go Select > Load Selection. When you select the next alpha channel you will get a bunch of options, one of which will be to Add the selection to the active selection.
In general for these types of compositions it a good idea to create a mask of the main subject and save it as an alpha channel. This gives you a lot of flexibility to manipulate it on its own layer.
Regards, Murray
DannyRaphael
10-03-2007, 08:26 AM
Hope the following gets you where you want to go...
Suppose you have 2 alpha channels named, say, Alpha 1 and Alpha 2...
In the Channels Palette:
* Click on (highlight) Alpha 2
* From the Cnannels Palette menu choose Duplicate channel... (assign a name of your choice), e.g., Combined
* Now Ctrl + click on Alpha 1 to "load its selection" (marching ants). The same results can be achieved via Select > Load Selection... and specifying Alpha 1
* Next Select > Save Selection...
* From the Channel dropdown menu (default is New) choose Combined.
When you make this selection the options below with become "un-grayed."
* Choose the applicable option -- probably Add -- and click OK. Alpha 1 and Alpha 2 will be merged into Combined
This approach keeps the original alpha channels in tact. If you needed to do this often, an action would streamline the process.
More complex merging of alpha channels can be done via Image > Calculations, but that's probably overkill for what you're trying to do here.
DannyRaphael
10-03-2007, 08:27 AM
TIA, you can add alpha channels together. Go Select > Load Selection. Choose the alpha channel you want. Then Go Select > Load Selection. When you select the next alpha channel you will get a bunch of options, one of which will be to Add the selection to the active selection.
In general for these types of compositions it a good idea to create a mask of the main subject and save it as an alpha channel. This gives you a lot of flexibility to manipulate it on its own layer.
Regards, MurrayNice going... you beat me to the punch while I was playing! :)
beestripe
10-03-2007, 08:57 AM
ahha, I knew it would be something logical eluding me, problem solved
In the meantime I figured out a work-around, simply by creating a lens blur with the foreground subject masked on a copied layer, then made a Layer Mask gradient to reveal the original layer's sharper foreground. This way I could redo the gradient if desired and keep the mask of the main subject.
Cheers
pixelzombie
10-03-2007, 09:07 AM
i was gong to suggest duplicating the main layer, but it looks as if you've figured that out already...
Graphics23
10-03-2007, 09:30 AM
Use the Calculations and Apply Image commands.
Regards,
Michael