![edge blending in photoshop edge blending in photoshop](https://enviragallery.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/warren-wong-VVEwJJRRHgk-unsplash-1.jpg)
You can see the trees “glows” adn the rest of the sky gets too dark. The sky has some nasty halos around the edge of the trees. This I have to get rid of to get a successful HDR photo. Remember that the tone mapped image has got halos (shining edges) around the trees. I don’t want black trees in my final image, so I have to merge the sky in, without getting the trees. The lake is maybe too dark, and I will use the lake from one of the other exposures. I then study the under exposed image for a moment:Īs you can see both the sky and the lake looks good here. I do this by hiding my tone mapped layer like this: Now that I have my layers arranged I check that my sky looks great on my under exposed image. Then I find the one with the good sky, which is the under/exposed and place that second. I start by arranging them, so that my tone mapped image is on top. I now have my 4 images in Photoshop as layers. When I open Photoshop and I hit SHIFT+ALT and then the keyboard language changes into English.
#Edge blending in photoshop windows#
If not it is quite easy to add a language in the Windows Control panel (Control Panel->Region and Language->Keyboards and Languages->Change Keyboards). In the Danish version of Windows, we get English automatically, and that may be the case of every installation. It is fairly easy to switch, given that you have installed it. The English keyboard short cuts are optimized and I prefer to use these and I recommend to switch to English keyboard. I have observed that the Danish shortcut layout is badly optimized in Photoshop. Step 1 Arranging the layers in Photoshopīefore I start working with Photoshop I always switch to English keyboard. I find in this menu:Īnd Photoshop loads and then load the layers. Then I hit the command to ‘Load into Photoshop as Layers’. When I open Bridge I select my HDR Process folder with my 4 images and I select them. I do not use Bridge for anything else, but this is nifty little feature. There are many other ways of doing it manually, but this is the only one I know, where I can do it in one operation. I use Adobe Bridge to get my images into one Photoshop file as layers. These 4 images I want to get into Photoshop in layers. I then created a 4th tone mapped HDR image and saved that next to the 3 source images. You will then remember that I had 3 source images (an under-exposed, a normally exposed and an over exposed image).
#Edge blending in photoshop how to#
I assume that you have read my page with ‘ How to make an HDR image‘.
![edge blending in photoshop edge blending in photoshop](https://pe-images.s3.amazonaws.com/photo-effects/cc/blend-textures-with-photos/photoshop-normal-blend-mode.gif)
I will use Photoshop CS6 to demonstrate, what to do, and later I will make tutorials that shows how to do it with Elements and Gimp, but for now you will have to translate the principles into those two for yourself. And if you do not have a budget for either of these two, you can also do it with Gimp. For some reason Adobe have not made the Layer Mask a part of Photoshop Elements. What I’m going to teach you, you can also do with Photoshop Elements, but you have to do a work around to do it. It’s not so important what version it is. This part of my HDR Tutorial assumes that you have a version of Adobe Photoshop CS.
![edge blending in photoshop edge blending in photoshop](http://cbimg6.com/tutorials/09/11/14238ac.jpg)
Hopefully you can read the images as they are.) (I know there is a bug clicking on the images on this page – I haven’t figured out yet, why WordPress does that – I’m working on it.