It's just a proof-of-concept, you know ;-)
I didn't read Boris' requirement carefully enough, sorry. Here's another
<http://www.hemy.me.uk/Miscellany/PICT0568bwcopy2.jpg>
All the same clouds, just stretching the cloud layer, takes seconds once the
layer is set up.
--
Piers
-----Original Message-----
From: olympus-owner@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:olympus-owner@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf
Of Chuck Norcutt
Sent: 28 September 2007 11:42
To: olympus@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [OM] Re: OK, Fidel, let's line them up and shoot them down . . .
Eh? I see hardly any difference between your version and the original
except that yours has actually lost a bit of clouds (just above the
water) in the area that Boris wants to fill. What's wrong here?
Chuck Norcutt
Piers Hemy wrote:
> Boris
>
> Here's another version (though I agree with the other comments that
> there ain't much wrong with it as is). This took slightly longer than
> using the methods Chuck and Winsor have described, but it is what you
describe.
>
> I copied the entire image to a new PS layer. I used the magnetic
> lasso to select the ground on the background layer and erased it. I
> inverted the selection and applied it to the copy layer then erased
> the sky. Reverting to the background layer I used the Edit -
> Transform - Skew command to stretch the sky then used clone and heal
> brushes to plug in the gaps where the ground features had been.
> <http://www.hemy.me.uk/Miscellany/PICT0568bwcopy.jpg>
>
> If you want to move the new sky around, there is a PSD version here:
> <http://www.hemy.me.uk/Miscellany/PICT0568bwcopy.psd>
>
> Piers
--snip
==============================================
List usage info: http://www.zuikoholic.com
List nannies: olympusadmin@xxxxxxxxxx
==============================================
|