Monday, November 3, 2008

How to Create a Work of Art from a Photograph

By David Peters

If you are like me there has been some point in your life where you have looked at one of your photos and said to yourself, "Wow, that could almost be a painting!" Were you aware that there are digital techniques that you can use to transform your photos into a watercolor or pen and ink painting or charcoal drawing? Once you have transformed them they then can be printed on canvas or fine art watercolor paper for that true art feel and permanence.

Digital photography methods today are bridging the gap between "fine art photography" and simply "fine art." What could take a painter days, weeks and months to create now can be done digitally in a few hours. And many techniques can be applied to the same image. It all depends on how you want to "interpret" your art work.

Photoshop Elements has several tools that only require a little bit of time and experimentation in order to figure out how to use them to enhance your photographs. Simply by adding a bit of "noise" or "Gaussian Blur" filters to your photograph can do wonders to transform your ordinary photo into a work of art.

As you practice you will become familiar with many of the filter tools available and you will soon figure out that you will want to apply different tools to certain parts of your image. A simple way to do this is to select an area of your picture that you want to apply an effect to and "cut it" from the main photo and copy it into a new folder. When you have done this you can then work on each part of your image independently. Finally, once you have finished adding your effects to the part you had cut away you can simply copy it back into the original image and relocate it to the proper position. It will literally "snap" into place when you line it up with where it needs to be.

Photoshop Elements has some wonderful "Effects" tools and experiment with some of these to see what they can do with your image. Ahhh, and when you have created some masterpieces, try converting them into black and white or select portions of your image as black and white while other portions remain in color. You will get a "painted effect" on the color portion.

When you are using these filters you are literally altering the pixels of the image. This allows you to make the image far larger without the loss of resolution that you would experience with a normal photo. For example, we have applied some techniques to an image taken on an 8 megapixel digital camera and have then printed that image at 30 x 40 inches on canvas and it is stunning...and it can easily go larger. - 15437

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