Hi. This is Marty from Blue Lightning TV.
I'm going to show you how to make a dramatic portrait of someone peering through shattered glass.
I provided a PSD file that you can download, so you can follow along.
Its link is in my video's description or project files below.
There are 3 parts to this file that we'll use at various stages of this tutorial:
an image of shattered glass on black, this gray gradient that we'll use an an overlay
and the shape of the jagged hole that's in the center of the shattered glass.
Open a photo of a person that you'd like to use for this project.
I downloaded this one from Shutterstock.
To place it into the shattered glass document, first make sure your Move Tool is active.
If it isn't press "v" on your keyboard.
Drag your subject onto the tab of the shattered glass, drag it down and release.
To resize and position it, first, we'll reduce its opacity, so we can see the shattered glass through it.
Open your Transform Tool by pressing Ctrl or Cmd + T.
Drag it to a position that shows your subject's face inside the area of the jagged hole.
If any part of the Transform's bounding box is inside your canvas, you'll need to resize
and/or reposition it, so the bounding box remains outside.
Go to a corner and when you see a diagonal, double-arrow,
press and hold Alt or Option + Shift as you drag it out or in.
Finesse its position and to accept it, press Enter or Return.
Increase its opacity back to 100% and drag the layer to the bottom.
We'll convert our subject into a Smart Object, so we can modify it non-destructively, as
well as replace it with a another photo without having to redo the effects.
To do this, click the icon at the upper, right of the Layers panel and click "Convert to Smart Object".
Make a copy of it by pressing Ctrl or Cmd + J.
Hide the Glass Overlay layer and make the Broken glass layer active.
Change its Blend Mode to "Screen".
Make a copy of it and make the original layer active.
Invert it by pressing Ctrl or Cmd + I and change its Blend Mode to "Darken".
We'll move the layer 1 pixel up and 1 pixel to the right by pressing the Up arrow on your
keyboard once and the right arrow once.
Make the subject copy active and open your Channels panel.
If you don't see it, go to Window and Channels.
Ctrl-click or Cmd-click the Center Hole channel thumbnail to make a selection of its shape.
Open back the Layers panel and Alt-click or Option-click the Layer Mask icon to make an
inverted Layer Mask of the selection next to the active layer.
Go to the Layer Mask and press and Hold Alt or Option as you drag a copy of it next to the "Glass Overlay".
Go to Filter, Blur and Gaussian Blur.
Blur it 5 pixels and click OK or press Enter or Return.
Make the Glass Overlay layer visible again and active.
Reduce its opacity to 30%.
Double-click the thumbnail of the glass overlay to open its Layer Style window.
Click Bevel & Emboss.
The Style is "Inner Bevel", the Technique is "Chisel Hard" and the Depth is 200%.
The Direction is Up and the Size is 4 pixels.
Check "Global Light".
The Angle and Altitude are both 45 degrees.
The Highlight Mode is Screen, the color is white and its opacity is 100%.
The Shadow Mode is Multiply, the color is black and the opacity is 70%.
Click "Drop Shadow".
The Blend Mode is "Linear Burn", the color is black and the opacity is 30%.
Uncheck Global Light.
The Angle is 135 degrees, the Distance is 45 pixels, the Spread is 16% and the Size is 27 pixels.
To get rid of the thin bevel around the inside edge of our image, click off the chain-link
icon between the glass overlay layer and its layer mask.
Doing this allows us to resize and/or reposition either of them independently of the other.
Click the layer to make it active and open your Transform Tool.
Drag it out until you don't see the bevel anymore.
Make the top layer active and click the Adjustment Layer icon.
Click "Color Lookup" and click "Load 3D LUT".
Click "Fuji F125 Kodak 2393".
Next, we'll add a soft dark vignette around the outer edges.
Click the New Layer icon to make a new layer.
Open the "Elliptical Marquee Tool" and go to the center of the face.
Press and hold Alt or Option + Shift as you drag out a circle approximately this size.
Go the Select, Modify and Feather.
Feather it 200 pixels.
Invert the selection by pressing Ctrl or Cmd + Shift + I.
We'll fill the selection with black, but first, if your foreground and background colors aren't
black and white, respectively, press "D" on your keyboard.
Since black is your foreground color, press Alt or Option + Delete.
To deselect it, press Ctrl or Cmd + D. Change the Blend Mode to "Overlay" and reduce its opacity to 50%.
Next, we'll give the glass a slight green tint.
Make the Glass Overlay layer active and click the Adjustment Layer icon.
Click "Solid Color".
In the hexadecimal field, type in 7F917A.
The Color Fill adjustment layer is affecting all the layers beneath it in the Layers panel.
To restrict it to just the glass overlay layer directly under it,
press Ctrl + Alt + G in Windows or Cmd + Option + G on a Mac.
Change its Blend Mode to "Color".
If you want to adjust your subject's size or position behind the glass, scroll to the
bottom and click off the chain-link icon to unlink the subject copy's layer and its layer mask.
Make the layer active and Shift-click the bottom subject to make it active, as well.
Open your Transform Tool and if you see this message, just click OK.
Reposition your subject and if you see that your Transform's bounding box moved inside
your canvas, adjust its size so the bounding box remains outside.
This is Marty from Blue Lightning TV.
Thanks for watching!
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