![]() ![]() ![]() I used Topaz Detail Soft Looking for Step 2. You can see the differences in Step 2 and Step 3 in the above examples. In Topaz Simplify - Use the Painting Watercolor filter that is just below the Painting Oil filter. These tools are used in Photoshop or Photoshop Elements. Hi Marc! Diane has it right on the clone flaws (clone tool out any brown spots remaining) and the mild burning. Light burn means use the burn tool at a low % (light=small=a little) and darken some edges is it a kind of highpass filter ?Ĭould you please tell me which settings to use in simplify for your beautiful effect ?Ĭlone flaws means use the clone tool and take away any flaws. On my eval version painting_water color fills the document with grey and you don't see flower anymore. My english is not sharp enough for following sentences : Hope you find success! Let us know how you do. Try with one you have taken yourself or find a higher resolution photo than ones posted on these boards. You won't have the same options or they will be called something different in other software. Marc Labro - I am sorry I did not make it clear that I use Photoshop or Photoshop Elements in my tutorial. Thanks again! Great job philmarq! I love the gardenia. Played with this gardenia using your tutorial.thanks for the sharing your method. Is your example resolution enough for detail ? To avoid long discussions because i am new in topaz products, could you please make some print screens of the different topaz you used ? I find your result very beautiful with respect to my ctrl j+gaussian blur+50%opacity i use very often. I have tried to download your first flower image and follow your tuto but without success.įirst detail makes staircases around petals, second simplify water is grey so nothing visible and i don't see the luminosity slider.you explain. Very nicely done, Doris! I will try this on some of my pics of flowers! Thanks for sharing! ![]() Glad you guys liked it! So cool to see the results, also! ![]() The luminosity layer really made the center of the flower colors come out! Thanks for the tutorial.ĭoris.I followed your directions.thank you! I like how it came out. Super tutorial, Doris!!! Hoping some of the others will start doing this also.īeautiful technique. I'm inclined to file it under Detail since it's the very fisrt one using it. Thank you Doris! I'm looking forward to trying this out. Thanks Doris, General approach will be useful for other looks. Nice tutorial Doris, thank you! The end result looks great. It's not easy for sure! I have another one outlined. Thank you! I think I spent over an hour putting this together. I am looking forward to seeing more of these from you. I cannot for the life of me, put together a cogent toot for the group. Originally posted at 7:01PM, 26 August 2009 PDT I hope you liked this tutorial, it is my first! Remember to play around with the settings to get what YOU like! Doris P Step 4 - You should now be on Background Copy 3. Do some light (15% or so) burning around the edges of outside petals or in darker areas to add depth and interest. Adjust saturation down a little to remove some of the vividness in any greenery in your photo. Step 3 - Apply Topaz Simplify watercolor. Notice that softening the photo can remove small defects in the flower. Step 2 - Apply Topaz Details soft looking. Step 1 - Open your subject photo, crop and adjust levels. This will give you a dreamy, soft look which is especially good with pastel flowers: Hi, Here's one of the ways I like to do flowers with Topaz. ![]()
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