Image preview: Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

Learn how to turn your photos from boring to intense in 12 easy steps. Download the source file for this and all our other tutorials in our VIP Members Area.

Read More... 31 comments

Final Image

This is the final image that we’ll be creating. This tutorial aims to show how a few simple steps can add real intensity to your image.

lime12 Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

Images Used

Lime Photo

Step 1

Open up a photo of a lime:

lime1 Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

Step 2

Start by cutting out the lime. To do this, select it using the lasso tool or pen tool, and then paste your selection onto a new layer.

Then create a new layer beneath your lime cutout layer called ‘background’. Apply a radial gradient ranging from 292C2F to 0F1010. This is the first step to making your photo more intense, by positioning your photo in front of a dark background you’re giving it more contrast, and making the bright colors of your photo stand out more.

lime2 Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

Step 3

Now create a new layer below your lime layer and above your background layer called ‘background highlights’. Create a couple of radial gradients ranging from white to transparent behind each piece of lime. Then reduce the opacity of this layer to 40%.

lime3 Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

Step 4

Now apply a color overlay to your background highlights layer (color: 83BFDE).

lime4a Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

lime4b Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

Step 5

Now create a new layer called ‘background shadows’ and apply a black to transparent radial gradient beneath each lime piece, and between the two pieces.

lime5 Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

Step 6

Now duplicate your lime photo layer and change the duplicate’s blend mode to ‘hard light’. Reduce it’s layer opacity to 50%. Then duplicate your hard light layer and change the blend mode to ’soft light’, keeping the opacity at 50%. Then merge down both of your duplicate layers with your original lime layer, by pressing option+e twice.

lime6 Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

Step 7

Now go to image>adjustments>hue/saturation and apply the settings shown below:

lime7a Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

lime7b Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

Step 8

Now go to filter>sharpen>sharpen, to emphasize the details of your lime.

lime8 Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

Step 9

Now go to image>adjustments>color balance. Make the adjustments shown below to reduce the green in your photo and give a more yellowy tint to compliment your gray background.

lime9a Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

lime9b Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

lime9c Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

lime9d Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

Step 10

Now create a new top layer called ‘burn layer’. Select a large, soft black paintbrush, blend mode: ‘color burn’, hardness: 0%, opacity 10%. Paint over the darker green areas of your limes to bring out the shadows. I reduced my burn layer’s opacity to 50% eventually in order to make the effect a little more subtle.

lime10 Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

Step 11

Now create a new layer called ‘orange burn’. You want the edges of the yellow inner part of the lime to burn to a deep orange color. Change your brush color to orange (FF6C00) and use a medium size soft brush to brush around the edges of your yellow area. Then reduce your brush size, and brush even closer to the edge of the yellow, making this area more intense with color.

Finally, be sure to change the blend mode of this layer to ‘color burn’. This will really bring out the orange color of this layer, and won’t let your of your orange brush marks overlap into your dark background.

lime11 Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

Step 12

Now create a new layer called ‘white highlights’. Use a white paintbrush to paint in the highlights in the yellow area. Use a very small brush to repeatedly brush over your white edge and thin white lines. Then enlarge your brush and paint over the light areas of your green lime skin. If any of your brush marks go over into your dark background, use your magic wand tool to select outside of your lime shapes, then return to your white highlights layer and hit delete.

Finally, I reduced this layer’s opacity to 40% to make the highlights more subtle and realistic.

lime12 Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

And We’re Done.

And there you have it! Very simple photo manipulation, to create a truly intense end result. If you compare the before and after images below, you can see how these easy techniques make a real difference to your images.

lime1 Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

lime12 Make Your Photos More Intense in 12 Easy Steps

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.

31 Awesome Comments: Leave Your Comment

  1. User Gravatarsalmen 8th March 2009

    Nice Work

  2. User GravatarTom 9th March 2009

    Thanks mate :)

  3. User GravatarCristhian Bedon 9th March 2009

    Seems like its an orange instead of a Lime, nice job though, seems to bring out the lime.

  4. User GravatarTom 9th March 2009

    Heh I see what you mean, I thought it was kinda cool to bring out the color even in the orange part though.

  5. User GravatarSneh 9th March 2009

    This is an awesome tutorial … makes simple special right? Thnx for sharing :-)

  6. User GravatarTom 9th March 2009

    Yep that was the idea. Not everyone has hours to work on complex graphics, sometimes it’s simple, but applicable techniques that are most useful. I’m glad you enjoyed it :)

  7. User GravatarNaldz Graphics 9th March 2009

    Great tutorial as always.i like it:)

  8. User Gravatarprojectautomatika 9th March 2009

    simple and great!

  9. User GravatarTom 9th March 2009

    Thanks guys!

  10. User GravatarMarcoscSantana 9th March 2009

    EP = Easy and practical… good tutorial.. nice job

  11. User GravatarTom 9th March 2009

    Thanks. I’ll try producing some more ‘practical’ tutorials like this one in the near future.

  12. User GravatarEric Shafer 9th March 2009

    Great tut, simple but useful.

    Featured here: http://www.presidiacreative.com/web-picks-15/

  13. User Gravataraldrin 10th March 2009

    great tutorial it’s really impressive

  14. User GravatarTom 10th March 2009

    Cheers.

    Eric: Thanks for the feature :)

  15. User GravatarCss-Magazine 11th March 2009

    Hmmm amazing colors.

  16. mark 11th March 2009

    it was better at start

  17. User GravatarDainis Graveris 11th March 2009

    the final image looks much more delicious than first one! :) nice!

  18. User GravatarNora Reed 11th March 2009

    The finished product looks so nice. The yellow color brightens it up so much. The black background is great too.

  19. User GravatarTom 11th March 2009

    Thanks guys! :) I’m glad that you enjoyed this tutorial.

  20. User GravatarBrian Simpson 12th March 2009

    The original looks better – sorry man. Don’t fix it if it aint broke.

  21. Lindsey 13th March 2009

    The original image is much better than the final. Sorry. But you can actually tell it’s a lime in the original; in the final, the colors are so manipulated to the point where it looks more like an orange than a lime. There are ways to make your photo pop using this method, but not to this intensity.

  22. User GravatarPatrick Turner 14th March 2009

    I agree with the above comment but it is still a great effect for other photos

    especially fashion portraits, the soft and hard light layers really made a photo come to life!

  23. User GravatarProjectCenter 17th March 2009

    That’s pretty easy stuff but still useful.

  24. User GravatarAdam - Creare Design 20th April 2009

    Quite nice. I find that modifying the levels of images makes a huge difference in making a distinction between light and dark colours, which in turn makes images seem more striking.

    Nice tutorial though.

  25. User GravatarFabian 22nd April 2009

    Have you tried making the original on the white background stand out more? This seems to cut and paste.

  26. User Gravatarphoto retouching 7th May 2009

    What a great piece of photo retouching , it has achieved a 3d feel.

  27. Alex 15th May 2009

    Bad. The Original looks nice, the final one is ugly. Never seen a lime with yellow inside. Also your technique of cutting out is bad. There should be no round corners. Don’t use the lasso, use the path tool and do it accurately.

  28. dip 15th May 2009

    Now I like the steps and the tutorial is quite easy to follow, but what I absolutely dislike is that you changed the color of the fruits insides, that should remain green, you should have masked that or changed the color back to green in the last few steps.

  29. User Gravatarhuwaw69 21st May 2009

    the original is really much better the color of the final image is really not like a lime…

  30. User GravatarLinda 9th September 2009

    Kind of looks like one of the new cross breed fruits, exotic and beautiful. Very useful. Thanks

  31. User GravatarJasper 25th September 2009

    sorry, but I like the original shot better… The dark background and shadows are a good edit but I don’t like the color altering/level shifting you do here.

Leave a Comment: