![]() Of course, right now, it looks a little bit strong, so we just want to bring it back with the Fade slider. Notice when I do that, it applies the colors from this layer onto the other one. That’s the one that I want to grab the colors from. And our source is going to be our working image which is likejacksons.jpgĪnd the layer that I want to use now is actually going to be Layer 1. So how do we match it? Here’s a quick way? We go to Image Adjustments and then go down to Match Color.Ĭhoose our source. Select the background, because we want to change this. One layer has a warm color cast and on the other side there’s a kind of a blue color cast. So here’s how you will deal with that. Now, in the real world, I would use Select and Mask (see tutorial) but I’m just trying to show some basic principles here. Open the Properties panel (window>properties)Ĭhoose the feather slider and push that a little bit. We could just do a little cheat thing to fix it. Notice we got a little bit of a hard edge. This will keep the selected area and mask out the non selected are on the top layer. Grab the Quick Select Tool and drag in the area to select.Ĭhoose Select>Inverse Selection, (Ctrl/Cmd+Shift+I)Ĭlick on the new layer mask icon in the layers panel. That’s one way of doing it, but I’ll show you another way. ![]() We need to artistically combine these two photographs together.So we could actually just paint it out for a mask. If I also hold the Option key, it will drag it up from the center. There’s a quick way to do that and that’s just hit Ctrl/Cmd+0 (zero) and it will zoom out until you see those handles.Īnd now I can go on the corner, hold down the Shift key and drag it out proportionately. If I zoom out, eventually, you’ll see those handles. Now we’re going to create a little composite really quickly, combining these two photos.Ĭombine the 2 images into 1 using the methods above.Ĭtrl/Cmd+T, brings up the Free Transform, but notice that the photo that we put in here is so much bigger we can’t see those handles. We’re going to go back to Arrange and then we’re going to go Consolidate all the tabs and now it just takes everything back to where it was.Ĭomposite: When you combine more than 2 images in Photoshop to make a new image. Now we can see the two documents side by side.Ĭlick and drag on one, we go to the other one, hold Shift for centering and release it. Method 3 tiled windows (all versions) Step 1Ĭhoose Window and then we choose Arrange, and then just change this to, say, 2-up Vertical. I turn Application Frame off, notice that the document windows are floating and I can take a photo and drag it into the second one notice we’ve combined them. In Windows: Window>Arrange>Float All in Windows (still holding down the Left Mouse Button) Hold down the Shift key, (shift will center it)Īnd now release. We’ve now got both the photographs there inside of two layers on top of each other so we can combine them.Ĭhoose the window menu and Application Frame on the Mac. Mouse or your cursor, over the top of the new image. The destination document will appear after a second. Then move your cursor right up into the tab of the document that you are going to copy the photo into. The easiest way to do it inside of Photoshop CC is to click and hold on your mouse button (or wacom pen) the photograph that you want to bring into the other one. It seems like this is an area that people trip up a lot, so I’m going to do a tutorial on it right now and just answer all those questions once and for all how do you combine two photos. Hey Cafe Crew, it’s Colin Smith here from PhotoshopCAFE and this week I’m going to show you how to combine two photographs together inside of Adobe Photoshop.
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