Image preview: Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

This tutorial will teach you how to take your photos and transform them into a high-contrast work of art. You’ll be creating a photo montage, using a combination of selection techniques and layer masking.

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Images Used

These are the photos that I’ve used for this tutorial.

http://www.sxc.hu/photo/1107722
http://www.sxc.hu/photo/1124484
Burnt Paper
http://www.sxc.hu/photo/501004
http://www.sxc.hu/photo/106059
http://www.sxc.hu/photo/1133977
http://www.sxc.hu/photo/731511

Final Image

This is the final that we’ll be creating:

contrast18 Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 1

Create a new document (600X600px) and paste in an image of an old paper texture. Call this layer ‘paper texture’.

contrast1 Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 2

Now go to image>adjustments>hue/saturation and reduce the saturation to -60, and increase the lightness to +80. This should give you a nice looking washed out background.

contrast2 Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 3

Now paste in a portrait photo of a woman into the center of your canvas. Be sure to cut out the woman from her original background using the lasso or pen tool selection tools. Name this layer ‘woman photo’.

contrast3 Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 4

Now go to image>adjustments>desaturate, to grayscale your photo. Then go to image>adjustments>brightness/contrast and increase the contrast to +85.

contrast4 Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 5

Next I paste in an image of some burnt paper. Resize the paper so that the edge of the burn fits with the edge of your woman’s torso. I reduced my layer opacity on the burn layer in order to judge where these edges were.

contrast5 Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 6

Now use your magic wand tool at 50 tolerance and click on the white part of your burnt paper image. Then go to select>inverse. This should select the dark part of the burn. Then create a new layer called ‘burnt paper outline’ and fill this selection with black. You can see the resulting shape below. After this is done use your lasso tool to cut away and fill in parts of the woman’s torso to fit with this burnt paper edge.

contrast6a Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

contrast6b Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 7

Now select the dark parts of your image (the shadows of your woman and the black burnt paper outline). To do this go to select>color range. Then select ’shadows’ from the drop down list, and set selection mode to ’selection’. Finally increase ‘fuzziness’ to 200. Hit OK, and this should select the dark parts of your image (which are shown up as white in the preview box).

contrast7 Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 8

Now with your selection in place go to select>save selection and save it as ‘mask selection woman’. Create a new top layer called ‘gradient overlay’. Then deselect. Now select a large paintbrush (100px), and set hardness to 0%. Then choose a nice bright/obvious color (I went with red) and paint over your woman’s facial features and parts of her hair.

contrast8 Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 9

Now we want to apply a layer mask in order to fit the red paintbrush marks over the dark parts of the woman’s face/hair. To do this go to select>load and load your previous selection (‘mask selection woman’). Then with your selection in place go to layer>add layer mask>reveal selection. You can see the result of this below:

contrast9 Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 10

Now right click on your paintbrush layer and go to ‘blending options’. Apply a gradient overlay, with using the settings shown below. This should turn your red overlay into a nice gradient transition, giving a spot of color to your woman’s face.

contrast10 Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 11

Now reduce the opacity of your paintbrush layer to 70% to make the coloring more subtle.

contrast11 Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 12

Now paste in a photo of a newspaper headline over the woman’s body. Use the same technique of loading the selection and applying a layer mask to fit the photo properly to your woman’s shape.

contrast12a Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

contrast12b Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 13

Now change the layer’s blend mode to ‘hard light’ and reduce it’s opacity to 90%. Also use a large, soft eraser brush to erase away the edge of the newspaper, as the photo cut off the top unnaturally. Erasing the top edge subtly should also give the newspaper image some depth.

contrast13 Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 14

Now repeat these steps and add more photos over the woman’s body/hair. For the other photos keep the layer’s blending mode’s at ‘normal’, as you only want the bold newspaper headline to be a really harsh light.

To blend the images nicely together do 3 things:

Reduce their layer opacities to around 40%
Erase their edges using a large, soft eraser brush
Desaturate them.

contrast14 Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 15

Now I want to improve the gradient color overlay over the woman’s face/hair. I change the light green part of the gradient to a reasonably dark blue, and then use my paintbrush to paint in a little more over the edges of the woman’s hair, so as to extend my gradient overlay effect.

contrast15 Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 16

Now merge your burn paper edge with your woman photo layer. Reduce the merged layer’s opacity to 87%. This should make your image look overall more subtle.

contrast16 Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 17

Now create a new layer above your newspaper image layer and use a large, soft black paintbrush (30% opacity) and paint in a subtle shadow, making the newspaper get darker near it’s bottom. Then apply the selection/masking techniques shown earlier to fit the shadow to the woman’s body.

contrast17 Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

Step 18

To finish off I add some nice details, including the Swirl 2 Brush from QBrushes and a handwritten style heading using the free font Dirty and Classic

contrast18 Create a High Contrast, Artistic Portrait

And We’re Done!

Obviously much more can be done with these techniques and you can come up with some really complicated compositions. However, hopefully this tutorial taught you some cool techniques for you use in your own designs!

About the Author: Tom is the founder of PSDFAN. He loves writing tutorials, learning more about design and interacting with the community. On a more interesting note he can also play guitar hero drunk with his teeth.

33 Awesome Comments: Leave Your Comment

  1. Nachtmeister 19th January 2009

    Oh men. Thanks for your effort but please change your slogan… –> “Quality”

    I think your tutorial is nothing new…

  2. User GravatarVincenzo 19th January 2009

    ahaha you do it! nice nice, in the resting to see how raw was my tecnique ^^

    i’ll take ispiration

  3. User GravatarTom 20th January 2009

    Thanks Vincenzo.

    Nachtmeister: Sorry you didn’t enjoy the tutorial all that much. I personally hadn’t seen a tutorial like this one (and I’ve seen quite a lot), but I hope that you’ll check back to see the host of new tutorials I have planned.

  4. dollar 20th January 2009

    Thanks a lot Tom. Can you please make your next tuts easy-to-understand for newbies ?

  5. User GravatarTom 20th January 2009

    Hi Dollar, thanks for commenting. I always try to do a few tutorial aimed at newbies, but I would be happy to try and help you follow the harder ones. Is there anything in this tutorial that you particularly struggled with?

  6. dollar 21st January 2009

    Thanks for replying . I did not understand 5,6,12 steps.

    I hope you will create next tuts easy-to-understand as well as good one :)

  7. User GravatarMatthew Heidenreich 22nd January 2009

    Nice tutorial, simple and effect…well laid out

  8. User GravatarPSDFAN (or rather I am) on Twitter 22nd January 2009

    [...] Create a High Contrast Artistic Portrait [...]

  9. User GravatarTom 22nd January 2009

    Thanks Matthew, I appreciate the kind words :)

  10. User GravatarMax Stanworth 22nd January 2009

    Awesome you used a burnt texture of mine it your tut, made my day!

  11. User GravatarTom 22nd January 2009

    Thanks Max, I had a look at the full set on Flickr, it’s really great! I’m sure I’ll get to use more of the images in future tuts.

  12. User GravatarLogo Design Guru 22nd January 2009

    great post. It’s so interesting to see the progression of great art.

  13. User Gravatarjoyoge designers' bookmark 22nd January 2009

    nice work thanks…
    http://www.joyoge.com/story.php?title=create-a-high-contrast-artistic-portrait

  14. User GravatarTom 22nd January 2009

    Dollar: Apologies, your reply got caught in my spam filter for some reason. It looks like you need to learn about selection techniques and masking techniques. I can recommend these two articles for you:

    http://www.tutorial9.net/photoshop/the-selection-tools/

    http://graphicssoft.about.com/gi/dynamic/offsite.htm?zi=1/XJ/Ya&sdn=graphicssoft&cdn=compute&tm=13&f=10&tt=14&bt=0&bts=0&zu=http%3A//www.macworld.com/1999/06/create/graphics1.html

    I hope this helps, and I’ll consider doing a very basic tutorial in the near future.

  15. User GravatarROM 23rd January 2009

    Nice Girl! =)

    Thank you for interesting tutorial!

  16. User GravatarTom 23rd January 2009

    No problem ROM, thanks for commenting.

  17. dollar 24th January 2009

    Thanks again Tom. That links helped me :)

  18. User GravatarDesignNerd 27th January 2009

    Wonderful tutorial!! I’ll definitely be trying this one out….i love this sort of thing :)

  19. User GravatarTom 27th January 2009

    Thanks for commenting guys, I’m glad you like it :)

    DesignNerd: Drop me a link with your finished result if you like, or add it to the PSDFAN Flickr Group.

  20. EML 3rd February 2009

    This is great! Cant wait to try it!!!

  21. smartguy 7th March 2009

    yOU RUINED THE BEAUTIFUL GIRL IMAGE

  22. Alejandro Fernandes 10th April 2009

    Yes He did.. nothing new just old stuff..

  23. Andy 10th April 2009

    Hey, thanks for this tutorial. It really helped a lot especially for newbie like me. Thanks very much!

  24. User Gravatartokyoterri 16th April 2009

    Hey Tom, I’d suggest you ignore the folks who aren’t grateful for what you do – and pay attention to the classy ones who say thank you! :-)

  25. User GravatarTom 16th April 2009

    Hey TokyoTerri. Thanks so much for the kind words, that really means a lot. I know that everything I write won’t be perfect, but I can only try my best to write the best content I can. Comments like yours make it all worthwhile :)

  26. frank kalala 21st May 2009

    man was genious

  27. hunnyakaclarice 8th June 2009

    Hey Tom it was a nice tutorial although I did a few problems understanding the masking technique I’m working from both a pc and a mac and tried it on both..Can you help please? Thanks.

  28. User GravatarTom 9th June 2009

    Thanks for commenting Clarice. Could you let me know exactly where you struggled and I’ll try and help.

  29. hunnyakaclarice 10th June 2009

    Tom I struggled with steps 7 and 8 I believe. When I select the dark parts of my image it only selects the hair and not the face so when i go to save selection and create a new gradient layer the color does not apply and when it does apply after i select her face I don’t achieve the same result. if you would like to email me some tips you can reach me at cuttke@citci.com Thanks for the tutorial :)

  30. Melvin 20th August 2009

    Did this and It came out awesome.

    http://i9.photobucket.com/albums/a52/ThatGuy_82/Cdkevin.jpg

  31. User GravatarTom 20th August 2009

    Wow that is awesome Melvin! Great work :)

  32. Yiki 22nd August 2009

    HI Tom, a very nice one!Thank you so much.
    ~ Have shooted a photo of mine in black shirt..cant wait to try in next minute!
    cheers!

  33. User GravatarRon Arts 21st January 2010

    Nice tutorial. Will try them for sure!

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