Quote:
Originally Posted by vidoprof Can you tell me exactly what this means "use a black to transparent gradient on the mask mask so that it's only making the far right of the image darker." I am not to familiar with the gradient tool. |
Image1: The keyboard shortcut for the gradient tool is G, it shares a space with the Paint Bucket tool in the tool palette.
Image2: At the top of the photoshop window you can change the options for the tool, I have black to transparent selected in the dropdown menu.
Image3: I did this example on a plain, empty layer but the tool works the same when you have a layer mask selected. By holding down the shift key while you drag (release shift after you release the mouse button) you can get a perfectly straight line.
Image4: What it does.
Image5: What it looks like in your image with only that layer showing. You can also see a tiny white border around the layer mask icon in the layers palette... that means the layer mask is selected. The white border would be around the layer thumbnail/icon and the image part of the layer would then be selected if you clicked on that in the layers palette.
The 2 extra layers in my file have their blend modes set to Multiply, which will darken things. You could reduce the opacity (in the layers palette) of those layers to make the image lighter. Desaturating wouldn't make the image lighter, it would make the colors weaker or less intense.
I put my psd file here because I thought that looking at it in photoshop might be easier than trying to explain what I meant by using the gradient tool on the layer mask

On a layer mask black hides, white shows and shades of grey show/hide to different degrees. By using a gradient on the mask you should be able to get a smooth, unnoticeable transition from 100% hidden to 100% shown.
Another tip might be to alt-click on the layer mask icon/thumbnail in the layers palette. That will select the layer mask AND show you the layer mask in you image document. Alt-clicking the layer mask's icon/thumbnail again will show you what's on the layer and the mask will still be selected.
http://youtube.com/watch?v=aWDqWTy4d2M - at about 1:15 into the video they show how to add a layer mask and using the gradient tool on it.