Men and women age a little bit differently but since I've only aged female celebrities thus far, I'll just focus on women for this tutorial. I’ll be using the image of Katie Holmes as an example.
Step 1: Choosing an Appropriate Photo
When deciding to age-progress a celebrity’s face, I try to select a picture that is touched-up as little as possible.
I find that candid shots, or any shots that have not been taken in a studio, work best because the resulting harsh lighting reveals more of the skin’s details i.e. slight bags under the eyes and faint wrinkles. The appearance of such details makes it all that much easier to visualize how your subject will age. Visualizing what the end result will look like brings you one step closer to aging her face realistically.
In Katie’s case, we can
see very faint horizontal lines on her forehead, fairly obvious lines
under her eyes and lines bracketing her mouth.
Step 2: Collecting Reference Material
Reference material is key in my method of aging. Keeping Katie’s face in
mind, I scoured the Web, looking for faces of old women who either
resemble Katie and/or share the same facial expression. Here, Katie is
smiling with her face positioned at a 3/4 angle so I tried to gather as
many pictures of old women who are smiling in the same manner or close
to that. I then opened up the picture of Katie in Photoshop and pasted
the found images around her face on a separate layer, spread out to
provide easy visual access.
Another kind of reference I like to use but is usually hard to find, is pictures of the subject’s parents. I managed to find a couple of reference pictures of Katie’s mother online and they really helped me to decide whether or not to give Katie a double chin. Since her mom has quite a bit of mass under her chin, I decided I would apply that to Katie too.
Step 3: Thinning Brows
The first thing I like to do is to thin out the subject’s eyebrows and eyelashes. The older people get, the thinner their hair gets - either because hair falls out and/or because it dries out as it greys.
So to achieve this, I
like to use the Clone Stamp tool at 100% with a relatively small brush
size depending on the size and resolution of the image. I sampled the
surrounding skin to thin and reduce the number of hairs.
Step 4: Mold the Face
Next, I like to add the basic sags to the skin. I do this in the Liquify
mode. I tried to create sagging effects to the cheeks, jowls and the
cliff just above the eyes by using the Push tool. For the eyes, I tried
to be subtle; otherwise she may end up looking somewhat ghoulish.
From what I’ve learned
about the aging process, I know that while bones cease to grow, and in
fact shrink, cartilage does continue to grow. As a result, the end of a
nose may appear larger as a person grows older. So while I was still in
the Liquify mode, I used the Push tool to extend the length of the nose
slightly. Then I used the Bloat tool to also enlarge it slightly, being
careful not lose the essential quality or character of the nose. Go too
far and it may not look like Katie anymore.
Step 5: The Aforementioned Double Chin
Based on her mother’s
pictures, I then added a fairly massive double chin. I initially used
the Airbrush tool with some fairly broad strokes, sampling the colors
that were already in the area of her neck. I then worked in the details
with a finer brush size. Also, keep in mind that I was also using the
other reference photos of older women to guide me.
Step 6: Wrinkle Up the Eyes
For me, the most important parts to get right are the eyes. They can
make or break the project. Done wrong and the picture may no longer be
identifiable as one of Katie Holmes anymore. I sought out the fine lines
around the eyes and I tried to imagine how they would progress into
wrinkles. I then extended them in length and width accordingly.
Referencing the pictures of old women helped a lot with this step.
I used a combination
of the Stamp tool and Brush tool. I wish I could explain my technique at
this point in a more clinical manner but mostly I relied on my artistic
instincts. I emphasized the wrinkles around the eyes by widening and
deepening the lines slightly and increasing the contrast by darkening
the recesses and lightening the edges. Also, I extended wrinkles to the
cheekbone areas. I then applied the same technique to the wrinkles
around the mouth and to the forehead.
Step 7: Reducing the Lips
In this step, I work on the lips. As people grow older, the outline of
the lips tends to recede. Using the Stamp tool, I sampled the skin
surrounding the lips and thinned them out.
While I was at it, I
also added a few vertical wrinkles above the lips to give her a bit of a
"prune" effect. We just want a hint of that, so don’t carve out deep
lines; deep lines would only be necessary if she was puckering her lips.
Step 8: Planning Out More Wrinkles
Here, on a separate
layer, I faintly outlined or sketched, with a relatively thin brush
size, areas that I may or may not add more lines and wrinkles to. It’s
easy to get carried away with the addition of wrinkles. So, I stopped,
took a step back and assessed where to take to image. For me, it's
essential and a great test to see what best works.
Step 9: Touching Up the Wrinkles
Based on the previous step, I added wrinkles where I thought they were needed most.
Overall, I found that
the wrinkles and lines seemed a little flat in comparison to the rest
of Katie’s features. They needed more definition so that they could pop
out more. So, I highlighted the raised edges of the individual lines
with the Brush tool and with a lighter skin tone.
Step 10: Hairy Lips
Facial hair becomes an issue with most women as they age. For some
strange reason they lose it in the brow area and grow it back around the
mouth area. I didn’t want Katie to be the exception so with a very fine
brush size and the Brush tool, I added hairs to her upper lip.
I tried to make it as
subtle as possible. Hairs too thick or dark would draw the viewer’s
attention straight to her mustache and I didn’t want that. I also added
more wrinkles to the area below the corners of her mouth.
Step 11: Refining the Neck
I decided that the
neck was too smooth for a woman of 75 years of age. So I added finer
wrinkles to that area. Also, I added more mass and weight to her jowls
with the airbrush by increasing the value of the tones in those areas
thus creating more contrast between surface planes.
Step 12: Adding Age Spots
A key component to effective aging of a face is the addition of age spots.
So at this point, I
sampled one of the darker skin tones on her face, and on a separate
layer that was set to Multiply and 30% opacity, I brushed them in and
tried to create irregular shapes (there IS no perfect age spot). You can
add as many as you like; the amount varies from person to person. I
decided to be conservative with Katie.
Step 13: More Refinements
I took a little break from it and came back to it later to possibly get a
better perspective on it. When I looked at it, at this point, I decided
that certain areas needed refining and added detail. This is the beauty
of working with a high-resolution file; I can zoom in real close and
deal with a wrinkle up-close and personal.
Step 14: Preparing the Hair
The finishing touch here
is greying the hair. I began by creating a mask defining the area of
the hair. I used the brush for this and tried my best to define as many
loose strands of hair that I could.
With this mask as a selection, I then created a Hue/Saturation adjustment layer and reduced the saturation to –63.
I then created a new
adjustment layer based on the same mask and adjusted the
Brightness/Contrast to brightness +9 and contrast –36. As a result, I
found that the darker areas were too pale and caused a loss of depth and
so to adjust that, I then selected the mask and scratched out the
darker areas with a 5px brush size at 50% opacity so that they could
show through from the original image.
Step 15: Hair Raising
The next step was to raise the hairline and thin out the hair. Hair loss is common with both sexes.
I sampled the area at the top of the forehead and extended the skin area above the original hairline.
Step 16: Greying the Hair
A lot of details of the hair were lost in the previous step so with a
thin brush size at 80 percent opacity I drew in fine grey hairs,
sparsely laid out.
Patiently, slowly, stroke by stroke I added more and more hairs until I was happy with the amount of grey I had added.
Step 17: Finishing Touches
Finally, I took a step back, refined a few wrinkles here and there.
I hope this tutorial was insightful. It may not be the most technically detailed tutorial but it gives you a good idea of the process I go through to get the job done. Hopefully, it will help you.
Disclaimer:
This Photoshop Tutorials taken from various sources on the Internet and I compiled some of them for you. Hope you understand. More are in the line.




















0 komentar:
Posting Komentar