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Photoshop Tips

Creating a Backdrop in Photoshop

  1. Create 3 new layers in your image.

  2. On the bottom layer create a radial blend going from about 40%black in the centre to %70 black at the edges.

  3. For the middle layer, select brown and green as your foreground/background colours. Choose Render-->Clouds.

  4. For the top layer, select blue and green as your foreground/background colours. Choose Render-->Clouds.

Set the two top layers to Normal mode and about 10-20% transparency. Adjust them until you get an effect you like. Adjust the color using Hue/Saturation on either or both of the two top layers. If the overall effect is too dark, light, contrasty or flat, adjust the levels on the bottom layer.

Fixes for the Dreaded Moiré Pattern

Moiré is the name commonly given to the patterning that often occurs when you scan an image that has been printed using a halftone screen. The pattern results from the differences between the dot frequency in the halftone and the pixel frequency in the scan.

There are many different ways in which you can tackle moiré, but all have the net result of averaging the pixel data and thus introducing softness into the image. There is no way around this. A halftoned image has already lost image data which can never be retrieved.

If you are prepared to (or if you have not choice but to) accept the limitations in acquiring images in this way, the following methods may be used to improve the overall visual quality of these images:

  • If you are getting a lot of strong patterning, try scanning at a different resolution.

  • Try matching your scanning resolution to the halftone screen frequency, so if the image has been printed with a 133 lpi screen, try scanning at 266 dpi. (note that a lot of scanners interpolate such resolutions very badly and so using odd resolutions like this can result in worse scans)

  • Try scanning at a resolution higher than you need and then sample the image down. Often the resampling process fudges the image data enough to remove the patterning.

  • Apply the Despeckle filter (under Noise in the Filters menu). This will often yield acceptable results. It has the advantage that it does retain some edge information.

  • Apply the Despeckle filter to one or more color channels. (Often one channel will have more patterning than another)

  • Apply the Median filter (under Noise) to one or more channels, specifying just enough radius to remove patterning. Some people use Gaussian Blur instead of Median. I prefer the edginess you get from Median and believe it yields a sharper-looking result.

  • This is the high-tech approach that I use. If you are using Photoshop you can try it too. First, use the first two tips above to get the best scan you can. Then, make a duplicate of the image layer, apply Median with sufficient radius to remove the moiré, set the medianed layer to either lighten or darken mode (whichever yields the smallest pattern of fine visible dots over the image), duplicate the merged layers into a new document then use either Despeckle or Dust and Scratches to remove the fine dots. Adjust your levels if necessary then follow this with Unsharp Mask with a large (proportional to dpi) radius setting (to avoid sharpening any halftone dot artifacts) and small amount percentage (40-50%) and a threshold of 0.

Photoshop performance

For peak Photoshop performance on a Macintosh:

  • Buy as much RAM as you can afford. Ideally, you should have RAM allocated to Photoshop that is 3 to 5 times greater (in Mb) than the biggest Photoshop file you'll be working on. So if you'll be working on 40Mb files you'll need (ideally) 200Mb of RAM allocated to Photoshop.

  • Forget about RAM Doubler or any of the other RAM management software, they won't help except to wrestle small amounts of RAM off other applications that you might be running at the same time. They won't make Photoshop think that your 8Mb of RAM are really 16Mb.

  • Using your disk formatting software, create a partition on your fastest Hard Disk that can be defined as your scratch disk and keep it empty. Again, it'll need to be 3 to 5 times as biggest as the biggest Photoshop file you'll be working on. Switch off Apple's Virtual Memory scheme.

  • Make sure that you have at least as much scratch disk space as you have RAM allocated to Photoshop.

  • If you can't afford enough real RAM, consider getting a SCSI-2 or 3 card to speed the transfer of data to and from your scratch disk.

  • If you have enough RAM, hard disk space, etc., and you still want more, get a PhotoEngine card or similar.

Scratch Disk Error

If you get a "Can't perform the operation because the secondary scratch disk is full" message you can try:

  • Clearing your clipboard and undo buffers (you can do this by making a small selection and choosing copy twice, this clears the Undo buffer too).

  • Unfragmenting Photoshop's memory by creating a new small document and saving it.

  • Try running your operation on individual channels separately.

Scans of damaged/textured photos

Photos that are damaged or that are on textured paper are sometimes hard to scan well because the rough surface of the image creates shadows. Fortunately there is an answer. The following tip creates a scan that has effectively been lit from two sides. This eliminates a lot of the shadows, and makes retouching a damaged photo much easier.

Carefully scan the image twice, rotating it on the scanner glass by 180° for the second scan. (A good way to get the second scan exactly aligned to the first is to tape the image to a phone book. These are nice and heavy and have exactly parallel sides.) Then, in Photoshop, unrotate the second scan and place it into the first scan as a new layer. Set the transparency of this second layer to 50%. Move the scans until they are exactly aligned. (Use the Offset filter, it's much faster than nudging with the arrow keys) You may need to do some arbitrary rotation as well (provided you've been reasonably accurate, less than ±0.5° should be sufficient). When you're satisfied, flatten the image.

Correcting for Scanner Imperfections

For a better quality full page scan, try this:

First, find a perfectly white and smooth sheet of card as big as the scanable area on your scanner. Scan it 4 or 5 times in grayscale and at the resolution you need for your final image, using the scanner's auto settings. In Photoshop, apply Auto Levels to each scan. Composite them all into one document by using one of the scans as the host and adding all the other scans into it as separate layers. Set the transparency of each of the new layers to 50%. Flatten the image. Apply a gaussian blur of sufficient radius to create a soft looking image with even gradations. Invert the image to create a negative of the resulting composite. Perform Auto Levels again.

Now scan your picture, using the same selection rectangle in the scanner driver that you used for the card scans. It is important that you are able to align the images precisely, or else the corrections will be out of sync. Once your picture scan is in Photoshop, select Quickmask mode (Q) and copy and paste the composite into it. Exit Quickmask mode (Q), Hide Edges (cmd-H) and adjust the curves (cmd-M) and/or Levels (cmd-L) on the selected areas. Usually, the necessary correction is to darken the shadows and midtones. When you're satisfied that the image is more evenly balanced, Deselect All (cmd-D) and, if necessary, do a final curve adjustment to correct for any unwanted shifts that have occurred.

Selective Blurring/Sharpening

Most images have areas that need sharpening as well as areas that could benefit from softening. Make two duplicate layers of your image. Sharpen one and blur the other. Using the eraser tool and a well feathered lasso switch from one to the other erasing the bits of each layer that don't need the effect that layer applies. Adjust your layer opacities and flatten.

Blurring Backgrounds

Rather than painstakingly masking the subject, try loosely selecting the background. Float this as a selection and then make it into a new layer. Apply sufficient Gaussian Blur to emphasise the subject. Add some noise if the background now appears too flat. Any fuzziness from this layer that overlaps the subject may now be erased away with the eraser tool before the image is flattened.

Skin Tones

On old portraits, the tones on the face are often disproportionately grainy. To correct this, select the skin areas, excluding the mouth, eyes and any defining lines like those around the nose. Float this selection and apply enough Gaussian Blur to remove the graininess. Add some noise (4 usually works) and then adjust the opacity until you attain a good balance between detail and smoothness.

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