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Saturday, January 28, 2012

Horror Guy


Horror Guy

This will show you how to rot people's face, expose their skull and turn them into zombie.
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What you need:
  • A portrait of the victim. AKA, the zombie and a picture of a human skull. Ideally in the roughly the same pose as your portrait which can be found on Google images.

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  • Download The "Pretty" free brush collection found here. Ideally you will need to grab "Pretty Cuts`n`cracks" & "Pretty Sore"
  • Download The "Veins" brushes here.
  • It would also be nice if you had the `tonemapping` plug-in by Photomatix. Not essential but handy.


Let's get started!

OK, First off, install the downloaded brushes into your Photoshop brushes folder, we'll need them a bit later.

STAGE 1
Now, we need to prepare your portrait. These next steps are not obligatory, and you can skip to Stage 2 and start to zombify your image.
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Resizing the image to roughly 1300 pixels at its longest edge. The reason for this is that some of the brushes we downloaded earlier look a bit crappy if we try to enlarge them to accommodate a bigger image,working on a medium sized image allows us to retain the clarity of the brushes later on. You may crop it to the desired format at this point.
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Next, and this part is optional, we tonemap the image. So first off you will need to convert the image to 16-bit, the run the tonemapping filter. Play with the sliders until you get an effect you like. I use tonemapping as it gives the image a nice dirty look.
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Next duplicate that bottom layer,s o now we have two layers the same. Selecting the top layer You need to Desaturate it (CTRL+SHIFT+U) then set the blending mode of the newest layer to OVERLAY. Set the opacity of the new layer to roughly 70%. You should end up with something akin to this.
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We need to bring the eye detail back into the image, so we are going to add a layer mask to the top layer. To do this, select the layer and click the little black rectangle with the white circle at the bottom of the layers palette. You should now get a white rectangle alongside the thumbnail of the top layer. Next select the brush tool and select black as your colour. Now click on the white rectangle next to the top layer thumbnail to select it. Now you should be able to `paint` over the eye and you will see the bottom layer appear. Close up view below.
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OK, now that's all done, we will flatten these two layers into a new single layer, press CTRL+SHIFT+ALT+N then CTRL+SHIFT+ALT+E. this will consolidate all the work we have done so far into a new, single layer. This will now act as our base image. You may hide the previous 2 layers.

STAGE 2 – Adding the skull

Right, now we need to add the skull to the image and fit it to our face. The image of the skull use in this tutorial was a skull borrowed from the Oral Surgery department at the hospital. Anyway, opened the image in Photoshop, cropped the skull to size, then copied it into my base document.

Then reduce the opacity of the skull to 50%, then hit CTRL+T to enter into transform mode. Move and resize the skull to fit your face. The best way to line this up so it is more realistic is to pay attention to key feature. The most important being the upper ridge of the eye-socket lines up with the same ridge on your face, the jawbone needs to roughly line up as well, and also make sure the teeth and nose are in roughly the right place. This may mean you need to distort the skull image quite a lot from how it originally looked, but since we wont be seeing too much of the skull it doesn't matter if the rest of it isn't perfect.. basically the ridges of the eyes/eyebrows, the teeth and the nose are the most important here. See below for example.
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Once you are happy with the skull placement, hit enter and then set the opacity of the layer back upto 100%. Add a layer mask to the skull layer and mask out the edges around the skull. Also had to mask around the fingers as they would, in real-life(?) be obstructing the face/skull. This is what have done so far, hopefully yours will be looking something like this now.
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OK, next we need to go back to our base layer, that is the composite of the first two layers, and duplicate it and drag it to the top of the layer stack. Create a layer mask on that layer and get ready to scrape away some of your skin!!

Selecting the newest layer mask, select the brush tool, medium hardness, and select black from the colour palette (remember you can switch between Black and White by pressing the "X" key). Now, when you start to paint on the face, you will see the skull layer beginning to appear, freaky huh? find its best to completely paint out the nose and one of the eyes and of course the teeth! Another great tip to remember is to use the square brackets "[ & ]" to alter your brush size on-the-fly.

Take you time on this stage and have fun, pay particular attention to the area around the teeth and try to make the skin/teeth blend in nicely together. Hopefully your image will look something similar to this now.
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Even at this stage the picture looks super gruesome already, but what kind of self-respecting zombie doesn't have a bit of flesh-rot to really stink up the place!! This is where things get very nasty indeed.

STAGE 3 – Rips and Scars and Veins, oh my!!

OK, next you need to create another layer, name this one VEINS. OK, here you need to load up the "Pretty Cracks & Sores" brush set we downloaded earlier. These are pretty big brushes, however we really need them to cover the whole face (we will mask out the surplus veins in a minute). Select a brush you like the look of, choose a nice dark, deep red from the colour picker (and RGB value of 74,0,0 works well) and stamp it over your face (on the new layer). Don't worry if it looks a bit strange at the moment. Add a layer mask to this layer and use the black brush tool to delete the veins'n'stuff from areas that don't need them (eyes, bits of skull, fingers, teeth etc). Set the layer mode to `Multiply". Again, spend a bit of time on this to make it look badass. Once finished, right click on the layer. Select "Blending Options" and put a tick in the "Bevel & Emboss" check box, here used the defaults but adjusted the depth a tiny bit to increase the bumpiness of the veins. Now, you can add more layers and use more of the brushes we download earlier to add more scarring, tearing and veinage, experiment and have fun, it really is great defacing yourself or a loved one!! Remember to use separate layers for the hands, body etc.
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So next is just a few more overall cosmetic changes to the image to make it darker & grittier. Basically just add a gradient map layer (black to white), contrast/brightness layer and adjust to taste!! Now, hopefully you should be zombified up to the max. George Romero would be proud of you! R.I.P.

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