From the course: Landscape Photography: Washington's Palouse Region
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Compositing the red barn images - Photoshop Tutorial
From the course: Landscape Photography: Washington's Palouse Region
Compositing the red barn images
- Now we encountered a scene shooting today where it was impossible to get everything in focus from the foreground to the background. And we took three different images at three different focal points. Let's look how to put those together. Now I fortunately photographed my glove so I have a black frame, followed by three images and a black frame. That tells me exactly where to go to pull those images. In the previous movie with Panos, I didn't do that. So sometimes I forget, you know it's important to try and remember these little tips, because it really helps to find those images. The first image is sharp in the foreground. The next image is sharp in mid-ground and the final image is sharp in the background. So what we're going to do is take the three images. Remember if you make a change sync to all three. I don't need to make changes for this. We're going to select all three, right click, Edit In, Open as Layers in Photoshop. Here in Photoshop we have all three images represented…
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Shooting the sunrise5m 16s
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Shooting a panorama5m 17s
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Incorporating man-made objects into a landscape shot2m 50s
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Shooting a series for a composite image3m 13s
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Shooting the same row of trees up close1m 55s
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Shooting the last light of the day2m 15s
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Working through the post stitching process on the sunrise panorama5m 14s
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Compositing the red barn images5m 48s
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