View Full Version : Creative Portraits: Kids, Mason


DannyRaphael
01-11-2005, 02:35 PM
This adorable 18-month old is Mason, who is the grandson of a friend of member Legacy~Art.

Let's see what you can do with one, the other or both pics of this handsome lad.

~Danny~

p.s. Thanks, LA, for submitting these.

Legacy~Art
01-11-2005, 04:22 PM
As he is my friends grandson...I just love looking at this kid he as such a sweet little personality...

I did this in PSP.v9 only cos i have not learnt how to do paintings in photoshop, and this is done with a script called softpaint...

PSP Script in v8 & v9 are the same as the Actions in Photoshop.

Legacy~Art
01-11-2005, 05:06 PM
Oil Painting in Photoshop well i am learning slowly i just need to learn how to make an Action so i can do this again...

Come on Ladies and Gentlemen i am relying on you to show me how its done!

~Legacy~

JustChecking
01-11-2005, 06:14 PM
...and wonderful photos! thanks :)

1) simplified, made 1 copy
2) lower: imp->charcoal->default, brush 25%, bg-image, lower colour jitter
3) upper: imp->chalk sketch->colourful, brush 33%, bg-image, lower colour jitter, blend-soft light
4) pasted to new layer (ctrl-alt-shift-N+E), made 2 copies
5) lowest: imp->chalk sketch->half-finished, brush 50%, coverage ~90%, bg-image
6) middle: blend-colour
7) top: blend-overlay, desaturate, added mask (hide all), used to add here and there few details

:wavey:

SWEngineer
01-11-2005, 10:40 PM
Legacy,

Here's another variant of my basic oil painting mimic done in Elements 2. (This is just a weak subset of photoshop, so it translates directly). I posted a simple tutorial on this technique here. You can also check my verison of the English Gentleman for probably the best I've gotten this to work on a portrait. (I think it works well on landscapes, at least on lush landscapes. Portraits I've found to be very tricky. I guess I still have yet to try it on a still life.) :normal:

Anyway for Mason, here's what I did (hope you like it).

Color corrected the original a bit. Called this layer BG.
A: Copy BG. GBlur 2. Filter>Artistic>Sponge
B: Copy A. Filter>Artistic>Fresco. Opacity to 20%
C: MergeVisible (A,B). Ran SmartBlur and masked all but the skin areas
D: MergeVisible (A,B,C). Filter>Artistic>DryBrush.
E: Copied D to a new file. Increased ImageSize to 1500 px wide (a new twist)
Filter>Artistic> RoughPastels. Rotate 30 deg. Left. Filter>Artistic>RoughPastels. Rotate 30 Right. Select transparancy added to the canvas. Invert selection. Crop. Resize image back to 595 px wide. Copy this layer to the original File as layer E.
F: Copy BG. HighPass 1.5, GBlur 0.3 LinearLight 69%. Masked this layer and use a white brush on the mask to bring back some details in the face and hands.
G: MergeVisible(E,G). Unsharpmask. You could add some canvas texture too if desired.

-Mark

Neve
01-12-2005, 06:04 AM
After saying goodbye today to my grandson Mason, I just couldn't resist this little charmer!

Basically smudged entire image except the shirt. Had a brushstroked bg originally and then decided to erase gradually instead.

Legacy~Art
01-12-2005, 07:55 AM
SWEngineer (Mark) That is just lovely...I shall look into the tutorials and see what i can come up with thank you for your help...its really appreciated.

Arhhh Neve how clever...Sounds easy enough (ahem) so i shall give that a try...I love the way its turned out...

But being Biase i love looking at him hes a special kind of charming!

~Legacy~

glikster
01-12-2005, 10:30 AM
What an adorable kid!
I duped the BG.
Stealing JustChecking's idea, I converted to LAB.
Loaded Lightness channel as selection and saved it as a new channel.
converted back to RGB.
With Lightness channel still loaded as selection, run Impressionist: Pencil Sketch: Soft Detailed.
Invert selection, Run same filter, Fade to lower Opacity.
Deselect.
Load image as new selection.
Run Impressionist: Watercolor: Soft Water Sketch.
Fade to Darken.
Invert selection, Run same filter, Fade to Darken.
Load red channel as selection, Run same filter, Fade to Darken.
Invert selection, Run same filter, Fade to Darken.
Load green channel as selection, Run same filter, Fade to Darken.
invert selection, Run same filter, Fade to Darken.
Load blue channel as selection, Run same filter, Fade to Darken.
invert selection, Run same filter, Fade to Overlay.
Deselect.
Select all, Shrink selection to 95%, Invert selection.
feather by 5 px, fill with white.
feather by 15 px, fill with white.
Run PS:Texture:Texturizer - Sandstone, 97, 3, Bottom Left.

That's all folks!

Xaran
01-12-2005, 01:20 PM
I went for just the coloured drawing look on this one.

Christine

Karyn
01-12-2005, 01:23 PM
I have never replied to anything on this site yet, but I thought I would give this a try.
At first I did not realize this was a section for oils and watercolours - mine is nither, but I'm posting it anyway.
My first attempt was to combine both pictures.
1. did a vignette on both feathering about 45
2. rotated and copied the side view onto the frontal view.
3. erased any interferance between the the two views so that the faces were clear.
4. reduced the opacity of the frontal view slightly
5. merged and did another slight vignette.
Thinking I was done I went to post my work and discovered this was an area for watercolour and oil portraits. I quickly did a sketch of the picture
1. Image/Adjust/desaturate
2. duplicate the background layer
3. Image/Adjust/invert
4. change to clour dodge your picture will be white don't panic
5. Filter/Blur/Gaussian Blur
6. Adjust the slider to your liking
7. erase any busy background marks and facial marks
8. crop
That is all the time I had, hopefully my thumbnail will work

byRo
01-12-2005, 01:42 PM
..At first I did not realize this was a section for oils and watercolours
On my screen the title also looks like "Oils, Watercolors" but in fact the full title is "Turning Portraits into Digital Sketches, Oils, Watercolors" so actually your Digital Sketch is bang on!!
But as you'll quickly discover a good post is always welcome anywhere.

Nice post, too. Good idea to combine the photos.

byRo

Legacy~Art
01-12-2005, 02:24 PM
Glikster That is adorable too, did you work in photoshop to achieve that...I really need to understand all these filters etc...Great detail!

Christine thats adorable, isn't he a perfect little model...?

Karyn welcome to the joys of this wonderful forum...I adore your picture...combining two pictures that is just perfectly done!

Keep them coming girl!

glikster
01-12-2005, 02:38 PM
Thank you!
Yes, it was in Photochop CS with the Impressionist plugin. I am consistently more and more impressed with that plugin. It is much more talented than I am.

Legacy~Art
01-12-2005, 02:48 PM
glikster - I have just shown his grandmother and she is so pleased, so thank you! to you and everyone else...

glikster
01-12-2005, 02:58 PM
You're very welcome!
And I suppose it's a coincidence, but I finally got booted up to Member from Junior Member! Yay me!

DannyRaphael
01-12-2005, 03:54 PM
I have never replied to anything on this site yet, but I thought I would give this a try.
At first I did not realize this was a section for oils and watercolours - mine is nither, but I'm posting it anyway.
My first attempt was to combine both pictures.

Karyn:

As Ro said, you're in the right place with this one. Two thumbs up for using both pics.

Thanks for taking that leap of faith.

~Danny~

DannyRaphael
01-12-2005, 03:58 PM
Pretty much a few layers of Impressionist rendered effects + Photoshop Dry Brush blended together using layer masks and layer blending options.

See snapshot of the Layers Palette for the detailed layer progression. Dry Brush and the Impressionist effects were applied to copies of layer "Base."

If I have time later I might see what this one looks like with a few brush strokes in Corel Painter.

Thanks again, Legacy, for the darling pics.

~Danny~

Karyn
01-12-2005, 05:09 PM
Thanks for the wonderful comments. Everyone is so encouraging. I am learning a lot from this site. Hopefully this is just the beginning for me.

Neve
01-12-2005, 09:22 PM
Hi Karyn and welcome, keep up the good work!

Very nice result Danny, I must set up Impressionist again soon.

I went back to the drawing board in Painter with this which I'm still fumbling around in and experimenting. There's so much to learn! :confused: :confused:

Goauche, then Digital Water Colour, Soft Cloner, some GB. Opened in PSP8 to finish off adding a slight WC layer reduced opacity.

jaykita
01-13-2005, 12:24 PM
Adorable little boy. His family will be very happy i'm sure. Everyone's done such good work.
Here's my color-pencil sketch.

Neve
01-13-2005, 04:50 PM
Wonderful result Jaykita!

jaykita
01-14-2005, 11:05 AM
Thank you, Neve! Good work everyone :thumbsup:
I loved doing this one too. Such a cutie-pie. Thank you for a wonderful pic to work on!

DannyRaphael
01-14-2005, 11:25 AM
Thank you, Neve! Good work everyone :thumbsup:
I loved doing this one too. Such a cutie-pie. Thank you for a wonderful pic to work on!

I especially like how you did this one... Painter? or what? :)

Legacy~Art
01-14-2005, 11:41 AM
Mason's grandmother joined this group last night so she could see the pictures and she also as a love to do this kind of artwork...

I have to say however you did that picture its just BEAUTIFUL...

Axleuk
01-14-2005, 01:24 PM
Mason's grandmother joined this group last night so she could see the pictures and she also as a love to do this kind of artwork...

I have to say however you did that picture its just BEAUTIFUL...

What ? and she didnt even leave a comment ? tut tut deary !!! :)

Legacy~Art
01-14-2005, 01:51 PM
AxelUK she don't know how to use these boards...

But i am sure she is giggling at your remark!

~Legacy~

jaykita
01-14-2005, 06:24 PM
Mason's grandmother joined this group last night so she could see the pictures and she also as a love to do this kind of artwork...I have to say however you did that picture its just BEAUTIFUL... I especially like how you did this one... Painter? or what? :)

Thanks LegacyArt. Mason's granma must know i enjoyed doing it.
Hi Danny. Thank you so much for the appreciation. The software i used was good old photoshop 7. Thats right!
I'm not sure you want details of technique used, but i'll tell you anyway. :)
First i prepared a sketch layer the usual way. (desat, invert, g'blur etc) Then i used the photocopy filter on it and increased lightness to get thicker, softer lines. Erased all background noise.This was the base layer. Background layer was on top with a blank layer sandwiched in the middle (set to multiple blend). I used the bckgr layer for reference and eyedropper to pick the foreground colors and painted on the middle blank layer. For the complicated parts eg. squares on shirt, i used the select-color range feature, and edit-fill. Occasionally viewed my work by turning bckgr layer "eye" off every now and then. When finished, i discarded the bckgr layer.
Technique is very similar to what i did in the thread "English Gentlemen" pg.3. The method is described ON THIS SITE. (http://www.informit.com/articles/article.asp?p=30229&seqNum=9)
Hope this makes sense to you.

Legacy~Art
01-23-2005, 05:41 PM
I got a new computer 3 months ago, from the old one which was 5 yrs old,and the old one had only 6 gigs, this new one as 80 gigs, the old one i had the mouse for 5 years so when i got the new one i changed it all over, not a wise move, i have hated the new one really hated it, never would move smoothly, back to the old one i decided to attempt Masons picture in the painter program and this is how it turned out...