Creating the Lomography look
aka. How to create your own Instagram photos
In recent years with the advent of consumer smartphones, certain apps on the app market has made it possible to take photos that look like they were taken in a Lomographic camera. These photographs usually feature odd and/or unique colouring, strong vignettes, light streaks, blur and high contrast. These apps and modern lomographic film cameras take their cues from a photographic movement that began in the 1990's when the creators where inspired by cheap russian toy cameras, such as the LOMO LC-A.
This tutorial was created to let you create the lomographic look in a more controlled environment than Instagram or a cheap camera and with your digital camera. So dig up or take a few photos you'd like to experiment with and lets begin!
Below is a photo of James Gray, musician extraordinaire, at a wedding he played. This will be the subject for Shutter Science's tutorial.
Step 1: Open your image
Step 2: Create your selection
Select the Lasso tool and then change the feather to 70-90. Then draw a loose circle around the subject of your photo.
Step 3: Invert the selection
Now that you've slected the subject, we need to invert that selection and select everything but your selection
In the menu bar go to Select and then to Inverse, which will then invert our selections.
Step 4: Create the vignette shadow
With your selection inverted, create a levels adjustment level and tone down the mid tones and highlights of the selected rim of the subject, this will create the illusion of a vignette. After you have done this flatten your image.
Step 4: Creating the right colours
Lomographic photographs have very rich and unique colour tones, the next stop is to replicate that in our photo.
Add a curves adjustment layer now, and individually select the colour curves to play with them. You will see we went with an 'S' curve for ours, experiment to find what works best for you.
Step 4: Blurring
Lomographic cameras are notorious for having lens blur. The fourth and final stage in our tutorial will be replicating this soft focus look in our image. Duplicate your background layer and create a clipping mask on this layer.
Then select the brush tool and set it to be black. While having the clipping mask layer selected.
Create a brush the size of your subject by manually increasing brush size or pressing the '[' and ']' keys respectively to lower and raise the size. Click once to make a black spot the size of your focal area around your subject, you will not directly notice this, look in the layers panel to see the silhouette of the brushes work.
Next, after selecting the duplicated image layer, go to filter and then to gaussian blur to add your blur, the filter is quite powerful so experiment to find the right strength. After that your done! Congratulations!
Completed!
Here's our finished photograph! Ready for sharing!
Thanks to our model James, make sure to check out his music at:
http://www.facebook.com/jamesgraymusic1990
http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCeRWfnK5TV41F0utOJXHVLw
http://music.cbc.ca/#/artists/James-Gray
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