Adobe 13102498 - Photoshop CS3 - Mac User Manual page 331

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Combine multiple images into a group portrait
You can use the Auto-Align Layers command from the Edit menu to make a composite photo from a pair of nearly
identical images that may contain some unwanted areas. For example, one shot of a group portrait is ideal except that
one of the subjects has her eyes closed. In another shot her eyes are open. Using Auto-Align Layers and layer
masking, you can combine these shots and eliminate the flaw in the final image.
For a video on aligning layers by content, see www.adobe.com/go/vid0014.
1
Open the two images you want to combine.
Create a new image (File > New) with the same dimensions as the two source images.
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In the Layers palette for each source image, select the layer that contains the image content, and drag it to the new
image window. The Layers palette for the new image now contains two new layers, one for each source image.
In the Layers palette of the new image, arrange the new layers so the layer that contains the content you want to
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correct (portrait with eyes closed) is on top of the layer that contains the correct content (portrait with eyes open).
5
Select the two new layers, and choose Edit > Auto-Align Layers.
Select Reposition Only, then click OK. Photoshop finds the common areas in each layer and aligns them so that
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identical areas overlap.
7
Click the top layer to select only that layer.
Add a blank layer mask to the layer:
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• Click Add Layer Mask in the Layers palette.
• Choose Layer > Layer Mask > Reveal All.
Set the foreground color to black, choose a brush tip and size, and zoom in if necessary to focus on the part of the
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image you want to correct.
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Using the brush tool, add to the layer mask by painting over the top layer. Painting with black completely masks
out the top layer, while grayscale creates partial transparency to the layer below, and white restores the top layer. See
"Edit a layer mask" on page 319. Continue editing the layer mask until you successfully blend the two layers to create
one unified image.
Note: Make sure that the layer mask thumbnail, not the image thumbnail, is selected in the Layers palette during the
masking operation.
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To allow further editing, save the layered and masked version of the image, and make another copy that you can
flatten to produce a single-layer version with a smaller file size.
See also
"Merge and stamp layers" on page 291
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