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Mrs. Avocado, Seattle Age and Occupation: 23, Student Fiance's Age and Occupation: 26, Consultant Engagement Date: July 27, 2008 Wedding Date: October, 2008 Blogging Since: June 30, 2008 Venue: LDS Seattle Temple & Hotel 1000 About Me: Somehow this little farm girl found herself a genuine Pole to fall in love and eventually move away to Poland with. I am an LDS bride attempting to plan a private religious ceremony, ring ceremony, seated reception for 100, and an open house while coordinating for guests flying in from across the United States and as far away as Poland. I try to avoid fads, excess waste, and saturated fat. I strongly endorse photography, DDR, calorie counting, rss feeds, cooking, and utilizing your resources.
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Photo Texturization Tutorial

November 24th, 2008 @ 1:34 pm by Mrs. Avocado

Mr. Avocado hates photos that aren’t clean, crisp, and vibrant. I, on the other hand, can’t get enough of fine art texture processing. One of my favorite photographers, Timwill, does such a beautiful job texturing his photos:

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I did some photo texturing of my own for the RSVP postcards and our postcard guestbook, and today I am going to show you how to add “textures” to photos using a photo editing software that works with layers; in this case, Photoshop. A free trial of Photoshop can be downloaded here. I imagine you can do the same thing with the free editing program, Gimp.

Before you can do this, you need some textures. My flickr album of textures, can be found here. Please help yourself! Many of these textures are from Europe, but some of them are from the parking garage where I used to live in Utah. I guarantee that you can find at least 10 just in your house. Just walk around wherever you are and collect closeup shots of different textures like I have over the past few months.

*Please click to enlarge all “Photoshop demonstration” photos in order to better read the text on the screen shot.*

I looked through my folder and chose this texture:

And this photo of Krakow:

Step 1:
Open up both photos in Photoshop.

Step 2: Make sure that the “Move” tool is selected (the red arrow is pointing to it). Click on the texture photo, hold down your mouse, and drag the texture photo on top of the photo you want to texturize (in this case, my photo of Krakow). Let go of your mouse, and look in the bottom right corner of your screen. You should now see two different “layers”, one that says Background, and one that says Layer 1. Make sure Layer 1 is selected and click and drag on your photo to center Layer 1 on top of the Background layer.

Step 3:
With Layer 1 selected, look in the bottom right hand corner again and click on the blue arrow to access the pop-up box (the red arrow is pointing to this box). These options are “blending modes” and will allow you to create the textured effect.

Step 4:
I chose “Overlay” which is my favorite option, and look what happened to my photo!

Step 5:
I would like the colors to be a little less vibrant, so with the Background layer selected (the bottom arrow is pointing to it), I went to Image–>Adjustment–>Color Balance from the menu options at the top of the screen. The box that the upper red arrow is pointing to should appear. Dragging the sliders around will affect the color of the photo.

Step 6:
“Antiqued” photos usually also have a de-saturated appearance, so I went to Image–>Adjustments–>Hue/Saturation and dragged the sliders around to affect the vibrance of the image.

This is what I have so far.

Step 7:
The texture is a little heavy, so I selected Layer 1, and clicked on the arrow next to the word Opacity (the red arrow is pointing to it). I dragged the slider to the left to take the opacity of Layer 1 down, while leaving the opacity of the Background layer at 100%.

This is really where the tutorial ends, and you will just have to keep playing with things until you get the look you want.

Something I learned while texturizing was that the color of the photo you are dragging on top of your original image can directly affect the results. I took this yellow-ish texutre and dragged it on top of my composition.

And it gave me a much more “antique” look.

I then decided to get all crazy and test out this texture I collected at the Coliseum in Rome.

Not something you could use every day, but it might turn out really cool if you “created” a graffiti texture that included a heart, your wedding date, and other significant text and symbols and used it for a Save The Date.

Here are a few Before & After shots of photos I texturized and used for our Postcard Guestbook.

I never had the chance to use this photo anywhere, but it is definitely one of my favorite photos from our trip to Poland!

I’m not a photoshop expert, but feel free to ask your questions in the comments. I, or someone else, should be able to answer them for you. Good luck with all of your “texturizing”!

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15 Responses to “Photo Texturization Tutorial”

1.
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Bee
Miss Meatball (message)  613 posts, Busy bee

I love how you’re all “today I’m going to show you…” just like in your hair video. You’re a natural host!

 
2.
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Guest
DrDazey

Wow, that’s really awesome!! My photographer does a lot of these and I was wondering how. Now I can edit my own photos!! Thank you!!

 
3.
Miss Deviled Egg
Bee
Miss Deviled Egg (message)  892 posts, Busy bee

Neat-O, Miss Avacado! Thanks for sharing! I’m going to have to try this sometime.

 
4.
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Guest
almostananderson

That’s so cool! Our photographer offers this in her editing, but I didn’t really understand the concept until seeing your before & after photos. Thanks!

 
5.
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Mrs. Green Tea (message)  705 posts, Busy bee

cool beans! i know the tutorial posts are always a pain in the @ss and you do them so well. imma try this one, tank Q avo!

 
6.
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EmilyQ

Ooooooh. This will keep me occupied for hours!!

 
7.
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Cole

I think I’m with the mister on this one– the textured photos just look so contrived and over-processed. Maybe it’s a way to improve a bad photo, but I think a good photo loses something with the distraction of the texture on top.

 
8.
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Guest
CJ2009

wow, that is so cool! i didn’t know you could do all this texturing stuff. thanks for the tutorial

 
9.
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Bee
Mrs. Avocado (message)  1,407 posts, Bumble bee

@Mrs. Green Tea: I don’t even remember how long it took me to put this one together. Ridiculous!

@Cole: That is why it is great to be able to choose whatever photographer you want from all of the many varied options out there. I do think that some (like myself) use textures to improve a “bad photo” but there are some like Jesh de Rox, Natalie Moser, and Timwill who have an eye when it comes to editing and using textures subtly to enhance their photos. To each their own though!

 
10.
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Guest
VideoBride

Thank you so much! This is so appropriate- I’m going to be applying textures to my next video project so now I know the basics. See, reading Weddingbee really is “work”!

 
11.
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Member
CharlestonBride (message)  54 posts, Worker bee

Ahh, that’s me! The first shot is from our engagement shoot with Tim in Charleston, SC. I’m so excited that I’m famous enough to make weddingbee, even if it is only due to Tim’s amazing talent :) His work is truly amazing and he is awesome to work with. He gives you access to the images before and after his editing, so couples like yourself get everything you want!

 
12.
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Mrs. Avocado (message)  1,407 posts, Bumble bee

@CharlestonBride: Tim was supposed to be my photog as well. :) There was a date mixup and another couple ended up booking him instead of us, maybe it was you! (No hard feelings, since I lucked out with my photog friend, but I am uber jealous of the unbelievable photos you received in return)

 
13.
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Anne

Some of the best “textured” looks come from layering multiple textures together with varying opacities and then masking them off in places like skin- where most people prefer to see a smooth texture. One of the things we worry about as photographers is that really trendy things like spot-coloring and textures will tend to make a photo look cheap or dated in ten years when the style gets “old”. Because of this, I tend to think that textures work best for portraits, which can always be redone in a few years when styles changes again.

 
14.
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Bee
Mrs. Avocado (message)  1,407 posts, Bumble bee

@Anne: Anne, I in no way think I am a professional, or even a semi-pro at this technique. I agree, that it’s a difficult thing to master, to know how to mask properly (still struggle with that one) and to use textures in a way that they enhance the photo instead of drowning it in patterns and such. I think the best photogs shoot for clean, crisp, colorful images the majority of the time, and spice things up a little it with textures for their “fine art” images. :)

 
15.
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Guest
Anne

Totally agree. ;-) Try the multiple textures on top of each other - that’s what a lot of the pros do to get the really rich look. And kudos to you for figuring out photoshop!! Not an easy program to dissect!

 


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Mrs. Avocado Mrs. Avocado, Seattle Age and Occupation: 23, Student Fiance's Age and Occupation: 26, Consultant Engagement Date: July 27, 2008 Wedding Date: October, 2008 Blogging Since: June 30, 2008 Venue: LDS Seattle Temple & Hotel 1000 About Me: Somehow this little farm girl found herself a genuine Pole to fall in love and eventually move away to Poland with. I am an LDS bride attempting to plan a private religious ceremony, ring ceremony, seated reception for 100, and an open house while coordinating for guests flying in from across the United States and as far away as Poland. I try to avoid fads, excess waste, and saturated fat. I strongly endorse photography, DDR, calorie counting, rss feeds, cooking, and utilizing your resources.
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