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RJPawlick971

: How to color pictures to pastel? I wanted to ask you how I can (re-)color pictures. I use Gimp, but I guess the functions of Photoshop/Paint Tool Sai/etc. aren't that different, just easier

@RJPawlick971

Posted in: #Effects #Gimp #LightingEffects #Photomontage

I wanted to ask you how I can (re-)color pictures. I use Gimp, but I guess the functions of Photoshop/Paint Tool Sai/etc. aren't that different, just easier to find.

First, as an example, this is the original picture:



And the result looks like this:



I didn't do this and I'm wondering what's the best way to give any picture this sort of grey-ish look?

I usually just use the color picker tool and draw over it (then I use 'Overlay', 'Saturation', etc.), but it never really looks good. The problem with the Curves is that also the edges get a lot brither and it doesn't look good either.

Well, does anyone know how to do this? Thank you!

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@Margaret771

This is not exactly an answer because this was not asked. But non-realistic colors can get more impact if also the texture is modified to be unreal. Why - because it can push away subliminal thoughts of badly exposed or poorly color corrected photo. Some artistic filter may do the trick. An example:



Thislike processing is very easy to be overdone and the result is a crap. Only the original artist knows, what the wanted impression is.

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@Deb5748823

Generally speaking, you only want to paint on a photo as a last resort. Ideally, you would work on other layers, and use masks and blends and opacity to combine those layers with the photo layer into the result you want.

Starting with this original:



… one way to wash out the colors is to blend it with an inverted version of the same photo:


open the photo in your photo editor
duplicate the layer with the photo on it twice so that you have 3 identical layers containing the photo
name the top layer “photo” and add a mask to it, then fill the mask with black to hide the entire photo (later you can bring back parts of it by painting on the mask as required)
name the middle layer “blend” and set its blend mode to “Lighten”
name the bottom layer “invert” and invert its colors


… which should give you something like this:



… then you can bring back some of the face from the original photo by painting on its mask:


select the “photo” layer
choose a brush with a feathered edge and set the size to about the same size as the face in the photo
paint white onto the “photo” layer mask to reveal the face
set the brush size to about the width of the neck
paint white onto the “photo” layer mask to reveal the neck
set the opacity of the “photo” layer to 80%


… which should give you something like this:



… then you can colorize the whole thing to taste:


create a new layer at the top of the stack and name it “color”
fill the “color” layer with rgb(235, 230, 227) which is approximately what is in your example target image
set the blending mode of the “color” layer to “Overlay” and set its opacity at 70%


… which gives you something like this:



… which is getting into the neighborhood of your target example image.

At this point, you can work with the “color” layer to adjust the color of the whole image, or work with the “photo” layer to alter the way the face looks, or work with the “blend” and “invert” layers to alter the way the areas surrounding the face look. Adjusting the blending modes, opacity, or adding filters to any (or all) of these layers can give you dramatic results.

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