Very refreshing, you have ignited my interest again in making one for my family. Been away from compositing for a real long time as its not my main photographic work but alway appreciate it when its done right. Thanks Nick
So much work in the computer. I would try to get it right in camera. I guess it depends if you think about yourself as a photographer or a computer retouching specialist.
I greatly appreciate the time and effort in this post. Not only step by step but the thinking prior to the shoot is often overlooked. Can you send a link to the free overlays?
If you’re interested in a zoom workshop, I run a course called Photoshop Essentials which gives all the skills you need to ease into this sort of project. Give me a shout if interested nick@nickchurchphotography.co.uk
Hi - thank you for the feedback, really appreciate it. Photoshop has almost unlimited capability, but you need to grasp the concepts of layers and masks and all the tools before you can start to unleash all that power. This is especially the case if you’re coming from Lightroom where the whole method of processing is totally different. There are two options to get this knowledge, depending on whether time or cost is the priority. If you want to save money, then ploughing through UA-cam tutorials will do the job eventually. If you want to ramp up more quickly then a workshop/training is the best way. I do run a one-day workshop (in one chunk or split up) via zoom on ‘all things Photoshop’ aimed at photographers. This would give you all the underlying concepts and once they were on board we could walk through this example which would suddenly make a lot more sense. If you’re interested in that head to the ‘About’ section and my email address is there. Thanks again for the message 👍🏼
@@NickChurchPhotography I was going to say how useful and interesting the process was, but instead I'm going to say how cool and zen-like the music is :) Great stuff!
Very refreshing, you have ignited my interest again in making one for my family. Been away from compositing for a real long time as its not my main photographic work but alway appreciate it when its done right. Thanks Nick
My pleasure, glad it was helpful 👍🏼👍🏼📸
"F-ing million ways...", love it. This video was very timely, upcoming group composite.
Haha - thanks Peter, glad it was f-ing useful
@@NickChurchPhotography Ya, really helpful. Gave me F-ing million things to consider and think about and plan for, awesome.
@@NickChurchPhotography I hollowed! Hilarious!
Cool walkthrough Nick, thanks for sharing 🤓👍
Cheers Scott, thanks for taking a look
VERY USFUL. Thank for sharing and posting
Glad it was useful. Cheers
Great workNick, thank you for the details
Thanks Drew’s my pleasure. Let me know what you want to see featured next
Great breakdown and process. Thanks for sharing
My pleasure Andru
F-bombs left and right lol awesome.
I know - can't help it! Haha. Hopefully the message still comes across :-)
Fantastic! You deserve more subscribers and views!
You are no wrong my old chap
superbe. merci pour ce tuto ;)
de rien!
So much work in the computer. I would try to get it right in camera. I guess it depends if you think about yourself as a photographer or a computer retouching specialist.
Cool ❤️❤️🙏
Glad it helped!
I greatly appreciate the time and effort in this post. Not only step by step but the thinking prior to the shoot is often overlooked. Can you send a link to the free overlays?
I’m really pleased it is valuable. Sure. I’ll provide an updated link in the description… I’ll reply again when it’s updated
@@NickChurchPhotography Thank you
Thank you so much
You’re welcome
Superb, but way beyond my current skills.
If you’re interested in a zoom workshop, I run a course called Photoshop Essentials which gives all the skills you need to ease into this sort of project. Give me a shout if interested nick@nickchurchphotography.co.uk
Great video thank you 🙏🏻 what would be the best way to learn PS on my Mac? I’m literally starting from scratch so watching that was very daunting
Hi - thank you for the feedback, really appreciate it.
Photoshop has almost unlimited capability, but you need to grasp the concepts of layers and masks and all the tools before you can start to unleash all that power. This is especially the case if you’re coming from Lightroom where the whole method of processing is totally different.
There are two options to get this knowledge, depending on whether time or cost is the priority. If you want to save money, then ploughing through UA-cam tutorials will do the job eventually.
If you want to ramp up more quickly then a workshop/training is the best way.
I do run a one-day workshop (in one chunk or split up) via zoom on ‘all things Photoshop’ aimed at photographers. This would give you all the underlying concepts and once they were on board we could walk through this example which would suddenly make a lot more sense. If you’re interested in that head to the ‘About’ section and my email address is there.
Thanks again for the message 👍🏼
I found the music overpowering.
As I wrote and performed it myself, I’ll take that as a compliment 💪🏼
@@NickChurchPhotography I was going to say how useful and interesting the process was, but instead I'm going to say how cool and zen-like the music is :)
Great stuff!
@@graememacdonald1088 Thanks Graeme. That’s very kind sir!!
For a British person, you are having a hard time pronouncing "lasso" properly. There's only one "O" in there, mate.
No, it’s how we say Lasso in the UK. The English language is full of unusual quirks like this…
Everyone in Australia pronounces it Lassoo too
What an a$@holey thing to say.