Realistic Bokeh

  • Thread starter Thread starter gingerweasel
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gingerweasel

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I'm aware of the blur feature in photoshop but I'm wondering how realistic it can be made to look when isolating a person?

I understand that it would be better to do this at the time of taking the photo but I feel there may be situations where on a crop and with a slower lens I may not be able to do this.
 
If you just blur everything in the background it does not look realistic but if you use masks and partially erase them and some colour desaturation you can get a more realistic feel.

Try taking a couple of photos of a subject, one narrow and one wide open and compare them and try and get as close as you can in your editing programme
 
Heres a good trick.

You may of considered isolating the subject then blurring the back ground, and using masks etc. But what you can do is pre-make a mask, and then when you apply the lens blur it will blur more or less depending on the mask. This is a lot more realistic than just using opacity to make areas more or less blurry, it affects the radius of the blur and looks very real, if done right.

To make the mask; Duplicate the layer twice, make the top layer invisible and select the middle layer again. Add your blur to this layer, then make a mask for this layer. Paint in your mask to set the amount of blur on different parts of the image, using gradients is good if you have a surface that is on the z axis (near to far etc). Once you are done, make the top layer visible and select it. Go into blur>lens blur and use the drop down menu to select the mask of the layer underneath (i.e layer_1_copy_mask etc). This will then give you graduated/selective blur in your image.

note: It might be easier in some cases to extract your subject first, so that when you make the mask, you only have to concern yourself with the background, and using gradients is easier that way. If you do this, the blur from the layer underneath will include your subject, this will give a 'halo' effect around your subject, so you might want to clone out a fairly generous part of the subject from the blur layer, before you blur it.
 
Alienskin have a great Bokeh plugin for photoshop, although its not cheap.
 
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