Merging a Sequence into One Image »
By MaxW on Dec 9, 2004 in Photoshop |
This tutorial will take you through how to put your digital photo sequence into a single image.
1)
Open your digital images in Adobe Photoshop.
2) With your files open, create a New file
that is about 400 pixels bigger on all sides than your starting images.
Open all of your images from the sequence and move them towards the bottom
of the screen for later use. Note: For this to work well,
all of the images should be taken from relatively the same position.
3) Open the first image and copy and paste it onto the
New file. This is easy enough to do. (CTRL+C to copy,
CTRL+V to paste, CTRL+A to select all in the original image.)
4) Now find your second image and paste it onto a New
Layer above the first image in the sequence. Don’t worry, your
original image is on the layer below. The problem now is that your images
might not be aligned as is illustrated below. To solve this problem, you
will have to highlight the top layer (Layer 2 in this case) and set the
opacity to 60%.

5) Press V to use the move tool. Now
with the top layer on a lower opacity, you will have to use a reference
to line up the layers. In this case I am using the rail. This is how it
will look lined up.

6) Now that the layers are lined up, you can delete the
parts of Layer 2 that you do not need with the Eraser
tool. If the images are lined up correctly the layer underneath should
look the same as what you are deleting. If you delete the right part,
Layer 1 will show up, revealing the first shot to the
sequence. NOTE: Don’t forget shadows.
7) Now you will need the next image in the sequence and
you will have to post it on it’s own layer above Layer 2.
Set the opacity of this layer to 60% again and move it into place and
delete the excess. Once again, do not forget shadows.
Continue this with as many frames as you have in the
sequence and then press M for the Select Marquee.
Now press Shift+CTRL+E to Merge all of the layers together
onto one layer. With the marquee tool, crop only what you need from the
sequence and the press CTRL+N for a new, properly sized
page to paste your sequence onto.
9) Save it and you are finished. Here is how mine turned
out:

