How to Make a Cabin Cozy Part I

by | Jan 12, 2012 | Tips & Tricks | 5 comments

With much planning and little shooting over the past few weeks, I haven’t had much to post. So I guess I’ll post a little project I was working on just for fun the other day.

5561_Canon EOS 40D, 17 mm, 1-30 sec at f - 16, ISO 200

I’m working on designing a calendar for a local heritage site called Fort New Salem. It’s an awesome little town of old buildings! The other day, when it snowed for the first time in a long time, I drove over to the fort to take some pictures for the calendar. As you can see in the raw, unedited image above, it was a pretty regular winter day. Nothing special about it really, and when the sun did pop out every-once-in-a-long-while, it wasn’t bright enough to make anything look pretty. So I went home and popped the pictures into Photoshop. And look at the transformation!

010312-JAS_5561

Everything you see here is really quite simple to do. After brightening the picture up a bit in Lightroom, let me show you what I did in Photoshop to add drama to the sky, light in the windows, snow falling outside, and snow clinging to the forest branches.

1. Adding drama to the sky

010312-JAS_5561half

First, I found a nice picture of dramatic clouds. I took this one back in September 2011 in Michigan. The foreground wasn’t that interesting, the sunset itself wasn’t that interesting, but the clouds were cool!

Second, I selected the sky. This wasn’t hard because it is basically all one light value. In the Channels pallet, I selected the channel that had the greatest contrast, duplicated it, increased contrast using Levels, pained black over all the white areas I didn’t want to be selected (ie. the snow on the cabin roof), and then Ctrl+clicked on the edited channel to load the selection.

Thirdly, back in my Layers pallet, I created a vector mask from my selection over the cloud layer. Though tacky-looking at this stage, you can now see the new dramatic sky over the cabin.

010312-JAS_5561tacky

Now, all we have to do is blend the trees back into the sky. After trying various things, I found that setting the cloud layer to 70% Opacity and changing the Blend Mode to Hard Light, made it not look too shabby!

010312-JAS_5561cloudsfinished

There’s still a lot more to add! In my next post, we’ll add lights in the windows . . .

Get each article as soon as it goes live!

Recommended Ebook

5 Comments

  1. Bethany

    That’s a really neat photo! It does look very cozy 🙂 It interesting that you can add different pictures to it, to change the affect some. Looking forward to part 2!

    Reply
  2. David

    It’s amazing what can be done with PhotoShop! From a normal-looking picture, this is transformed into a first-rate piece of art.
    It’s funny, though, my first impression of the second photo was that they didn’t look like snow clouds. I guess I’ve seen quite a few of those…

    Reply
    • James Staddon

      How observant! I guess snow clouds look . . . well, exactly what the ones I replaced with rain clouds.. 🙂

      Reply
  3. Ryan Taylor

    Oh!! I just love that cabin!! You’re right David. Those clouds do look a little like rain. Maybe that freezing rain we’ve been getting a lot of lately around here is about to dump on this cozy little cabin!Great job, James!!

    Reply

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. How to Make a Cozy Cabin Part III « Lenspiration - [...] the mask we made over the sky in Part I? We created it over the Dramatic Clouds image so…

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Send the next blog post straight to your email inbox!

Thank you for subscribing!