![]() Hold Down, Alt/Option and create a new layer mask, It should be black as shown. Pro Tip (optional): If the 2 eyes aren’t straight on, but angled, right click and choose distort. (If the left lens was completely obscured, you could use the flipped one and call it a day.) Right now it matches, but we aren’t done, as no 2 eyes are alike and we want to preserve his actual eye. You will now see a flipped view of the lens. Right click inside the bounding box and choose Flip Horizontal. Press Ctrl/Cmd+J to copy the selection to a new Layer. ( Tip: Press Ctrl/Cmd+Shift+D to load the previous selection) Use the Quick Select to make a selection around the lens. Press Alt+Ctrl+Shift+E (Windows) / Option+Cmd+Shift+E (Mac). Ok, this eye looks great, but what about the other one? (If you are lost, go back to the video and see what I’m doing). ![]() ![]() See how the line just dissapears! This is actually kinda fun to do. Zoom in nice and close and paint over the edge with the white brush. Make sure the black mask is selected and your brush opacity is at 100% Set foreground to white (Press D and then X keys) (Do you see how this trick works now? You will in the next step) Only the areas we paint with white will now appear visible. Hold down the Alt/Option key and click on The layer Mask icon in the Layers panel (3rd for left). Don’t worry, we aren’t going to use that part of the photo (Amateur move), its just a step in the process, nothing will actually be enlarged. Right now you might be thinking, you slightly enlarged an eye, but maybe no-one will notice. (Temporaraly Drop the layer to 50% opacity if you need to visually see the position). Now we are going to slightly enlarge the selected area to cover up the seam.ĭrag the top corners to slightly enlarge the lens to cover up the seam. Here I have hidden the bottom layers so you can see what happened, you don’t need to hide them. Pressing Ctrl/Cmd+J will copy the selected area to a new layer. (Use the Alt/Option key to subtract from the selection if you go too far) Using the Quick Selection, make a rough selection around the glasses lens. Lets make a Composite, AKA Stamp Visible Layer (where you make a merged copy of everything on top of the layers) Now we have that outline on the top (if you don’t have the line on your image, then you can jump ahead a bit), I want to offer all the possibilities so this tutorial works for you in the real-world. With a small brush, fix the eyebrow reflection (you can see it in action on the video above, you did watch that first right?) (Don’t try and use the spot healing brush on the top, I have a better way for you).Ĭreate a new Layer, this is for cloning onto.Ĭhoose the clone Stamp tool and make sure All Layers is selected or nothing will happen. It’s looking good, but there is still a little glare over an eyebrow and an outline around the top. Also don’t worry about the outline where our selection meets the edges. Move dehaze first, this one will make the biggest difference.ĭon’t even worry about the reflection on our left, we just need one lens to look good. Make adjustments until the selected area matches the rest of the skin. Right click on the hamburger menu on the adjustment brush and choose Reset Local Correction Settings. We have the selection, now its time to make adjustments. Paint over the reflection areas to select them. Push the Flow, density and feather to 100 (3)Īdjust the brush size using the keys. (My video above shows all this is detail) Zoom into 100% view to make it easier to work more accurately. It looks like a soft box has caused reflections in both of the lenses. Let’s start with this image I found on Adobe Stock. However it will work in the latest version of Lightroom. This tutorial will not work on CS6 as dehaze was added in CC. I write both and it will appear like this: Ctrl/Cmd+J (Ctrl is for Windows and Cmd is for Mac) LEGEND: This works on Windows and MAC, Photoshop is the same, but modifier keys are different. Removing glare from glasses tutorial in Photoshop CC If you do this, you can avoid having to retouch the glare entirely □ Pro tip: When photographing people wearing eye glasses, slightly tilt the glasses and the reflections will usually be gone. However, I think you will find when this does work, it’s better than the other ways, because you are maintaining the true character of the persons face. I’m not going to promise that this will work on every image, no one technique does, that’s why we need to know different ways of doing things. I discover most of my techniques from trying lots of different things, and this is one of those, “I wonder if it will work” scenario’s and oh boy, does it ever work. There are many ways to do things in Photoshop.
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