Making Composites with Octoberfest Glassware
Apr 5th in Photo Effects by Chris Titze
Placing
masked glassware on a new background can be a difficult task. Either
the glass looks too transparent, with bits of the old background
showing, or it lacks highlights, or shadows. The techniques covered in
this tutorial are not limited to Octoberfest beer mugs. You can use
these practical techniques for any type of glassware in composite
Photoshop images.
Chris
Titze works at an ad agency as digital FX artist where he spend most of
the time with photoshop retouching Cars, Burgers, and Soda bottles.
Step 1
We start with a picture of myself holding a beer mug and a
photograph of the Octoberfest scene. The picture was a snapshot I shot
while I was visiting Munich during Octoberfest. Download the images to
get started: Octoberfest image and Beer image.
The crowd image has been blurred. This does two things: it fakes a
depth of field and it protects the identity of the passersby.
Step 2
Every good photomontage starts with a good mask. Use the Path Tool
and mask out the person, the beer, and anything that is behind the
glass that isn't transparent. You should end up with three different
paths: one for the guy, one for the glass, and one for behind the glass.
Step 3
Right-click on the path and select Make Selection. You will get
prompted by a dialog box; make sure it's set to 1 pixel, Anti-Aliased
checked, and Operation New Selection is checked. Once you press OK, it
will make a nice crisp selection. Right-click the original background
and press Command + J to make a new layer out of the selection. Do that
with the person, the beer, and the behind-the-beer path.
Step 4
You should have four layers in your document: the beer layer should
be on top, the inside beer should be next, the person should be
afterwards, and then the original picture in the background. You can
delete the background layer if you want to, or hide it.
Now it's time to place the Octoberfest picture behind the person.
One thing that becomes obvious is that the beer mug isn't transparent.
It still has the old background on it.
Step 5
The trick of making it look realistic is to make two beer mug
layers. One is for the shadows only, and the other is for the
highlights only. Set the Blend Mode on the top beer to Multiply and the
bottom beer to Screen. At the moment, the composite image still looks
too dense, but the secret is in the next step.
Step 6
With the beer multiply layer selected, click the
Blending Options dialog box. You should have the Layer Style menu box
open. On the bottom you should see the Blend if Gray box. Move the
white triangle to the left. Option-click on the triangle, and it will
split into two halves. This gives you more control to create smoother
transitions. There is no cookie-cutter solution for this step. Use your
own intuition until it looks good. Every glass behaves a little
different.
Step 7
Do the same thing with the screen layer, except move the black
triangle to the left. Once you're done, you will have convincing
transparent glass.
Step 8
The problem now is that the multiply layer is too intense. You can
see this on the layer behind the hand. Make a selection of the inside
beer path in the Paths Palette. Go back to the Layers Palette. Then
invert the selection by going to Select > Inverse. Create a new
Layer Mask on the multiply beer layer. This solves the intensity issue.
Step 9
You may need to go back to the multiply layer and screen layer and
tweak in the Blend If box. In some cases, there is too much
transparency in the beer mug. In those cases, make tweaks through the
Blend if dialog box. Since every glass is different, there is no exact
value that applies to all glassware. Just try playing with the arrows
until you get something satisfactory.
Sometimes you need to make minor touch-ups. If so, then make a
selection of the beer and lightly brush in some areas through the Layer
Mask.
Final Image
The last step is a simple technique used to make the image look
good. Create a new layer named Vignette. Use a big, soft, dark-colored
brush. Paint the edges to create a vignette. Set the Blending Mode to
Linear Burn. Play with the Layer Opacity until it looks good. I set it
to 80 percent. And there we have it, a composite image of me holding a
beer mug at Octoberfest.