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(Wang) #1
ICON ADVERTISING’S AJITH PRAN REVEALS HOW SELECTIONS CAN ADD DYNAMISM AND A
SENSE OF ENERGY TO EVEN THE MOST STATIC OF IMAGES

MIMIC MOVEMENT


“This visual was created for an advertising campaign
for one of Dubai’s leading sports magazines. Titled
‘Adrenaline Rush’ by Icon Advertising, the visual was
conceptualised by Firas. O. Tiirhi, creative and
managing director at Icon Advertising, with the
objective being to dramatise a visually stunning
representation of the rush experienced behind the
wheel of a Formula 1 car.

“We used the Pen tool for most of the selections in
this visual. I prefer using the Pen tool for a perfect
cut-out. The car itself was selected using the Pen tool
as it offers more flexibility in editing the path and
making a perfect selection. The other elements were
selected using the Pen tool in combination with the
Quick Selection tool and by using the Color Range. For
grading we used Channel Mixer and Color Balance.”

DANIEL HAHN ILLUSTRATES HOW
SELECTIONS CAN BE USED FOR MORE THAN
JUST CUTTING OUT A GROUP OF PIXELS

ADD A DEPTH OF
FIELD BLUR

001 USING DEPTH OF FIELD
In close-up shots of my characters I usually create
some areas in focus and some out of focus. This
creates a similar result to shooting a portrait shot
with a real camera. The way I approach this leaves
me in control of where I want the blur to be
exactly, so I can show or hide the areas I wish.


002 USE THE LASSO TOOL
To create depth of field using selections, open an
image and Ctrl/right-click on the Selection tool in
the toolbar. Choose the Lasso tool and draw a
rough selection around the area that you want to
be in focus, but be sure to make it smaller than
you want the final effect to be.

003 CREATE THE BLUR
Press Cmd/Ctrl+Shift+I to invert the selection.
Next, press Cmd/Ctrl+J to copy that area of the
image onto a new layer above. After this go to
Filters>Blur>Gaussian Blur and choose how
much you want to blur the selected areas of the
image. Now you can take the Eraser tool with an
airbrush tip and simply brush-erase out the areas
that should stay in focus.


“To create realistic motion blur, I
used the Path Blur in Photoshop CC and added some light flares.
atmosphere using Color Balance, Following this I created the
Curves and Levels. For the final HDR tone, I merged a duplicate
layer in Linear Light blend mode, then used Desaturate>Filter>
Other>High Pass with 1.6 radius.”

BEFORE

AFTER

© Icon Advertising LLC

AFTER

BEFORE

© Daniel Hahn

Daniel Hahn currently works as a vehicle designer
at BMW Designworks USA, where he not only
creates designs for the BMW brand, but also for
that of the Rolls Royce make.
As such, careful use of selections is key to
creating images that really sell a concept or idea, as
they can be used to highlight certain sections,
drawing the eye where it needs to go. Of course,
they come in useful in his personal work too, where
robots and sci-fi are something of a favourite.
“I use the selection function a lot by getting a
selection directly from a shape or an object sitting
on a layer,” begins Hahn on his uses of selections.
“If you Cmd/Ctrl-click on the thumbnail image of a
layer (containing images, text or shapes) you get a
selection in the form of what is on the layer.
“So if I want to cut out something very exact – for
example, metal pieces covering technical parts of
my robot designs – I use the Pen tool and set it on
Shape. I then draw around a silhouette of
something. Photoshop creates a shape layer in the
Layers window. If you now Cmd/Ctrl-click on the
layer thumbnail image of the shape layer, you get
that shape as a selection.
“As I never use the function to save selections,
using this workflow I can always go back to my
selections by clicking on the shape layers. Another
beneficial result of working with the Selection tool
in this way is that I can create layer masks where I
can paint inside an exactly defined boundary.”

■ Topaz ReMask
For approx £41/$70, Topaz
ReMask promises the
“quickest and easiest way to
extract a subject from your
photo.” The user simply needs
to use the brush tools to paint
over what they want to cut out and hit Apply. It also
comes with refinement tools to perfect your mask.

■ Perfect Mask 8
onOne Software’s Perfect
Mask 8 is marketed as the
essential cut-out tool for
photographers. It allows users to select subjects
and isolate objects with ease, and offers a range of
brushes and clean-up tools to help with the
process. It’s available for approx £58/$

■ EZ Mask
EZ Mask is an interactive
image masking tool capable of
extracting almost any object in
a given image, which includes smoke, reflections
or fine hair detail. It’s currently available for $150.
The same company also develops Power Mask for
$150, where the user simply paints along the edge
of the object to be extracted.

MASKING PLUGINS


PRO GUIDE TO SELECTIONS

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