HOW IT HAPPENED:
Edits (high level overview)
- Masked image to Polaroid frame, added text, brought in a background, drop shadow on Polaroid, color balance on green channel, and burn on the trail sign
- Black and white layer adjustment to the entire image, painted out the walking stick in the mask so it wasn't black and white, copied and pasted the red from the backpack on top of the B&W layer, corrected spots with the brush in the layer mask
- I got a Duluth Trading Company feel from this image. I used a filter, copied the layer, and pasted the original in between the two. After that, I set the middle (original) layer to soft light, the top to multiply. I added a brightness/contrast adjustment to the entire image and painted out some parts in the mask. I can't remember exactly what filter it was, but I know it was in the "Artistic" section.
- This is one of the subtle ones. I used a sharpness filter, dodged out the green plants in the foreground, and burned some of the ground very close to the camera. This is actually the only photo with a person in it, I copied the person out of this and added it to other images to convey more of a message of hiking.
- I used a color balance filter, mostly on the greens and neutrals. I added a "Lens Flare" filter where it looked like it made sense. This one actually took a while to get right
- This was color balance, a lighting effects filter with custom settings, and a copy and paste of the person (along with blurring the edges to make it look like it fit). I had to add a brightness/contrast on the hiker to make it blend well.
- Channel mixer/color balance to boost the greens on the leaf
- I cropped this image down to make the path run up the right third. I dodged some of the path and added the person again. The person is subtle, but that's what I was going for. Again, brightness/contrast on the hiker to make it fit and blurring the edges.
- The first step of this was HDR toning, the second was adding a color balance mask and playing around with the layer mode until I was happy with how it looked.
- This was a photo filter set to "warm" I believe. I burned some of the rocks in the foreground and repeated the process of adding the hiker.
- The bottom layer is the original image. On top of that is a watercolor filter set to overlay. On top of that is the original image again set to multiply. If you look closely you can see the strokes. The final step was adding a color balance and masking out parts I didn't want to affect (the river mostly). I also burned some of the large rocks.
- Color balance to boost greens and yellows and burning out the background to make it look like it's on black.
- The bottom image was HDR toning, on top of that was the layer duplicated with a warm photo filter applied and set to overlay. I think I adjusted the opacity of the top layer until I was happy with what it looked like. I clone stamped a rogue tree branch in the foreground as well.
- This may be one of my favorites. I did a color balance and a black and white adjustment layer. Then I used a radial gradient to unmask the middle of the image where you see the color. The rest is black and white.
- I needed at least one that looked SUPER instagrammy! This was a combination of hue/saturation, levels, color balance, and brightness/contrast. I'll admit this was slightly overdone but I wanted to get that big "oomph"
- This took quite a bit of work. I used color balance masked to the blue sky and did the same for the mountains to boost the blues and the greens in each. I burned some of the ground in the front and cleaned up small parts with the clone stamp and patch tools.
- I took my final image, adjusted it as I wanted (color balance again with masking) and added a white stroke (30px I believe) on the INSIDE of the image. That gave me the white photo frame. I transformed it, copied a few times, added drop shadows, and adjusted the layers behind to give the appearance of a stack of photos. I brought in a background and then strategically erased pieces of a paperclip to make it look like it was holding the stack of images in my photostory together. I added text on top of an altered rectangular marquee tool selection filled with white, and voila!














