Mirror Image Effect With Photoshop diploma project
Mirror Image Effect With Photoshop
Here's the image I'll be using for this
tutorial:
Step 1: Create A New Blank Document
Rather
than working directly on the photo itself, let's start things off by creating a
new blank document. This will allow us to create our effect at any size we need
rather than trying to work within the dimensions of the photo itself. Go up to
the File menu at the top of the screen and choose New, or simply press the
keyboard shortcut Ctrl+N (Win) / Command+N (Mac). Either way brings up
Photoshop's New Document dialog box. Enter in the dimensions you need for your
effect. For this tutorial, I'm going to enter in a standard size of 6 inches
for the Width and 4 inches for the Height, but of course you can enter whatever
dimensions you need. For the Resolution, I'll enter 240 pixels/inch, which
should give me professional quality print results if I decide to print the
image later. The most commonly accepted resolution for professional print
results is 300 pixels/inch, but you'll often find that you can get away with
less than that without any noticeably loss in quality. I typically use 240
pixels/inch with my images:
Create a new blank Photoshop document.
Click OK when you're done to exit
out of the dialog box. A new blank document will appear on your screen.
Step 2: Select And Copy
The Photo
Switch over to the document window
that contains the photo you're working with. We need to move the photo into our
new blank document. There's a couple of ways we can do this, but we'll use the
classic "copy and paste" method. First, we need to select the entire
photo. Go up to the Select menu at the top of the screen and choose All, or
press the keyboard shortcut Ctrl+A (Win) / Command+A (Mac). This places a
selection outline (also known as "marching ants") around the entire
image in the document window:
Step 3: Paste The Photo
Into The New Document
Switch back over to your new blank
document. We're going to paste the photo into it. To do that, go back up to the
Edit menu and this time, choose Paste. Or press the keyboard shortcut Ctrl+V
(Win) / Command+V (Mac):
Switch over to the blank document, then go to Edit
> Paste.
Photoshop will paste the photo directly into the new
document:
The
photo now appears inside the new document.
If we look in the Layers palette
for the new document, we can see that our photo has been placed on its own
layer above the Background layer. Photoshop has automatically named the layer
"Layer
1":
The photo appears on its own layer above the Background
layer.
You can close out of the original
photo's document window at this point, since we no longer need to have it open.
Step 4: Resize And Reposition The Photo Inside The
Document If Needed
You'll probably find that the photo
doesn't fit perfectly inside the new document. In my case, the photo is too big
and part of it is extending out beyond the document's visible area. We'll need
to resize it, and for that, we can use Photoshop's Free Transform command. Go
up to the Edit menu and choose Free Transform, or press the keyboard shortcut
Ctrl+T (Win) / Command+T (Mac):
Go to Edit >
Free Transform.
Either way brings up the Free
Transform box and handles around the image. Unfortunately, since part of my
photo is extending out beyond the document's visible area, I can't see all of
the Free Transform handles. To fix that, I'll simply go up to the View menu at
the top of the screen and choose Fit on Screen. I could also select the same
option with the keyboard shortcut Ctrl+0 (Win) / Command+0 (Mac):
Go to View > Fit on Screen if your image extends
beyond the visible area.
The Fit on Screen command zooms the
image out far enough so that everything, including the Free Transform handles,
are now visible inside the document window. To resize the image, hold down your
Shift key, then click and drag any of the corner handles inward until you have
as much of the image as you need inside the visible area. Holding down the
Shift key as you drag constrains the aspect ratio of the image so you don't
accidentally distort the shape of it. In my case, I'm going to click on the
handle in the bottom right corner and drag it inward until the bottom of the
photo lines up with the bottom of the visible area:
Step 5: Add A Vertical
Guide Down The Middle Of The Document
To
create our mirror image effect, we first need to move everything that we want
to "mirror" over to one side of the document. In my case, I need the
guy in my photo to be over on the left side. To help me decide exactly how far
to the left I need to move him, I'm going to add a guide down the middle of the
image. Go up to the View menu at the top of the screen and choose New Guide:
Go to View > New Guide.
This brings up Photoshop's New
Guide dialog box. Select Vertical for the Orientation so that the guide runs up
and down the image rather than left to right. Then enter 50% for the Position
option so that it runs down the exact center of the document:
Set the Orientation to Vertical and enter 50% for
the Position of the guide.
Click OK when you're done to exit
out of the dialog box, and Photoshop will add a new guide straight down the
center of the document:
Don't worry about the guide
appearing in front of your image. It's there only to help us while working in
Photoshop. Guides are known as "non-printing elements", which means
they won't print, or appear if you save the image for the web, even if you
forget to remove them when you're done.
Step 6: Drag Your Main
Subject To One Side Of The Document
Think of the guide we just added as
the "flip point" or "mirror point" for the effect. In other
words, everything that we place on one side of the guide will appear mirrored
on the other side of it. Of course, before we can mirror anything, we first
need to move everything we want to mirror over to one side of the document.
Select the Move tool from the top of the Tools palette, or press the letter V
to quickly select it with the shortcut:
Select the Move tool.
Then, with the Move tool selected,
click anywhere on the image and drag it left or right until everything you want
to mirror is on one side of the guide. Hold down the Shift key as you drag,
which will force the image to move only left or right, preventing you from
accidentally moving it up or down. In my case, I'm going to drag the guy in my
photo over to the left of the document just to the point where the bottom part
of his ear touches the side of his face. This is going to be the "flip
point" for my effect:
Drag your main subject to one side
of the document, using the guide as the "flip point".Don't worry
about the solid white area that's now appearing on the side of the photo.
Everything on that side of the guide will be replaced with a mirrored version
of what's on the other side in a moment.
Step 7: Drag A Selection
Around The Side You Want To Mirror
Select
the Rectangular Marquee Tool from the top of the Tools palette, or press the
letter M to select it with the keyboard shortcut:
Select the
Rectangular Marquee Tool.
Then,
with the Rectangular Marquee Tool selected, drag a selection around the entire
half of the document that you want to mirror. In my case, I'm going to drag a
selection around the left half of the document. You'll find that your cursor
will snap to the guide once you're close enough to it (as long as you have both
the Snap and Snap to Guides options enabled in the View menu at the top of the
screen). When you're done, you should have a selection outline around the
entire half of the document that you're going to mirror:
Step 8: Copy The
Selection To A New Layer
With
the side that's going to be mirrored now selected, go up to the Layer menu at
the top of the screen, choose New, and then choose Layer via Copy. Or press the
keyboard shortcut Ctrl+J (Win) / Command+J (Mac):
Go to Layer >
New > Layer via Copy.
This
creates a copy of the selection and places it on a new layer directly above the
previous layer. Nothing will seem to have happened in the document window, but
if we look in the Layers palette, we can see that we now have a new layer named
"Layer 2", and if we look in the layer's preview thumbnail to the
left of the layer's name, we can see that the layer contains a copy of the side
of the document we had selected:
Step 9: Flip The Left Or
Right Side Of The Document Horizontally
To
create our mirrored image effect, all we need to do at this point is flip the
half of the document that's on "Layer 2" horizontally. Before we do
that, though, we need to tell Photoshop that we want to use the vertical center
of the document (where the guide is) as the "flip point". To do that,
press Ctrl+T (Win) / Command+T (Mac) to quickly bring up Photoshop's Free
Transform command once again. You'll see the Free Transform box and handles
appear around whichever side of the document you copied to "Layer 2".
In my case, it's the left side. See that little target symbol in the center of
the Free Transform box, the one I told you not to click on earlier:
The small target
symbol in the center of the Free Transform box.
That
target symbol represents the rotation point for the Free Transform command. By
default, it's located in the center of the Free Transform box, but we can move
it anywhere we want. Wherever we move it to becomes the new rotation point. To
tell Photoshop that we want to flip the image along the guide, simply click on
the target symbol and drag it over to the side handle that's sitting directly
in the middle of the document. Once you get close enough to the handle, the
target symbol will snap to it:
Drag
the target symbol (rotation point) to the Free Transform handle in the center
of the document.
With
the Free Transform command still active, go up to the Edit menu at the top of
the screen, choose Transform, and then choose Flip Horizontal:
Go to Edit >
Transform > Flip Horizontal.
Photoshop
flips the contents of "Layer 2" for us, using our newly repositioned
target symbol as the rotation point, and the right half of the document now
becomes a perfectly mirrored copy of the left half (or vice versa):
The right side of
the document is now a reflected version of the left side.
Press
Enter (Win) / Return (Mac) to accept the transformation and exit out of the
Free Transform command. We don't need our guide anymore, so go up to the View
menu and choose Clear Guides:
Go to View >
Clear Guides to remove the guide.
As
I mentioned earlier, even if you forget to clear your guides when you're done
working on the image, there's no need to worry because they won't print and
they won't appear in the image if you save it for the web.
And
with that, we're done! Here, after just a few simple steps, is our completed
"mirror image" effect:
OUT PUT
The final
"mirror image" photo effect.
And there we have it! That's how to create a mirror image
effect with Photoshop! Visit out our Photo Effects section for more
Photoshop effects tutorials!
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