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Editing The Photo F I L M P O S T E R

Editing the photo

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Page 1: Editing the photo

Editing The PhotoF I L M P O S T E R

Page 2: Editing the photo

This is the chosen image in which we imported into ‘Adobe Photoshop’. This is the image before anything had been edited on it, so it is ready for

us to start editing to make it more appropriate for a horror film poster.

Page 3: Editing the photo

This is showing the cropping tool. By using the cropping tool on Adobe Photoshop, we can clearly see where the middle of the cropped picture

will be; this is very helpful to us as we want the model to be in the centre of the poster so that it looks conventional.

Page 4: Editing the photo

This is the image after cropping. As you can clearly see, our model is situated in the middle of the image, therefore making a conventional

poster. It will also help to balance the film poster out when we come to edit the text onto the image.

Page 5: Editing the photo

We have lightened the poster using the ‘Brightness Tool’. This has helped us to see the coat better on the model so we can brighten it to make it

more visible on the poster. We also raised the contrast so that the colours stand out and look a bit more clearer.

Page 6: Editing the photo

We have lightened the coat by selecting the ‘Paintbrush’ and setting the ‘mode’ option to ‘overlay’. We then selected the colour white and set the

opacity to 20%. This has allowed us to paint over the coat in a faded white colour to brighten it up. We then made the background a tad darker

using the ‘brightness’ tool.

Page 7: Editing the photo

This is the finished product after all the editing. We feel that this image

would make a great poster as it looks very conventional.

You can clearly see the model which helps make her stand out from the dark background, and it

also makes her seem more important to the audience.

We now need to import this image into Photoshop without the layers

so that we can add text and institutional images to it.