Today I decided to experiment with the pen tool in Photoshop. For those who are familiar with the pen tool, you may be wondering why someone who has used Photoshop for years, is just getting around to experimenting with it. Well for one thing, I've never really needed it, and to be honest, I'm terrible with it. However, I decided enough was enough and gave myself a little project. I was going to make my own digital version of this yarn matador that my father made when he was at a much younger age than myself.

So I started off using the pen tool on the red cape thingy that the matador uses. I then filled it with a solid red color and moved on to doing the same with the hand, the boot, the face, and the hat with the different color. Each one of these was on a different layer. I then did the arm and the torso separately, and finished the rest of the separate pieces.

From there I decided that I cannot have all of this be a fresh, new look while leaving the same photo of the wooden backboard as the background. So I went back to the original layer and copied it (never delete the original background layer until you are absolutely sure you are finished!) and then went about filling in the background completely with the wood backboard (basically covering up the matador as if it never existed), as well as getting rid of the washed out side that resulted from my camera's flash. 

Okay, so from there I had a full backboard to work with as if the yarn matador was never even put there. I made a new layer and filled it with a shade of brown...but I decided I still wanted the texture of wood to be on the backboard. To do this, I made the filled-in layer semi-transparent, and then copied it one more time to double up the color and make it a little more opaque. Below is the before and after shot of the backboard.

Next I made the matador visible again...
Now that I was looking at the entire thing, I couldn't leave the matador as a bunch of solid colors while the background had some texture to it...so I tried making the yellow jacket/pants, and the red cape/blanket slightly transparent so that the direction of the strings of yarn would give it a slight texture...
Unfortunately, it didn't give it the look that I was hoping for. Besides, if you click on the picture to view a larger version, you may see that along the edges, the nails holding the yarn are visible through the colors. Kinda tacky don't you think (no pun intended)?

So I decided to make them fully opaque and add my own textures manually with the pen tool and the fill command. I liked the end result (not perfect but it was copacetic enough), however I felt that it still looked flat. To fix this problem I added a drop shadow to a few of the layers and rearranged the order of the layers so the jacket was on top of the skin, and the red cape/blanket was the uppermost layer.
If you look closely, you will see that the arm has a shadow over it. This was a result of the order of my layers (the torso layer is above the arm), but when I reversed it, it looked messy. 

When I originally created the two separate layers, there was a slight gap in between them that allowed the photograph underneath it to peak through. To compensate for the gap, I just smudged some of the yellow in the arm over the gap because I knew that the jacket layer would cover it up. So if I reversed the layer order now, there would be a bunch of messy yellow lines coming out of the arm, leaving messy shadows over the torso...this is a small flaw in my work, but one that won't really matter to most people unless they are graphic design pros.




There you have it: the original piece of work, and the final result of my experimenting.
 
“There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility is being
superior to your former self.” - Ernest Hemingway
Self-Portrait
Myself
Hello and welcome to K. Henri Photography's photo-blog. This first post will be brief.

I plan to use this blog to post recent photo experiments as well as give my thoughts on photography, Photoshop, Lightroom, and anything else photo-related. I have been slacking off lately at using my camera so I hope that this blog will help motivate myself to experiment with new techniques on top of improving on the abilities I already have. Everyone has room for self-improvement: famous actors, billionaires, world leaders...I am certainly no exception.
“Always dream and shoot higher than you know you can do. Do not bother just to be better
than your contemporaries or predecessors. Try to be better than
yourself.” - William Faulkner
I welcome comments (as long as they are not just plain mean), so please feel free to comment or contact me with some input. I expect to have another post within a couple days so be sure to check back.

I will end this inaugural post with one more quote on self-improvement...
“How noble and good everyone could be if, every evening before falling asleep, they
were to recall to their minds the events of the whole day and consider exactly
what has been good and bad. Then without realizing it, you try to improve
yourself at the start of each new day.”  - Anne Frank