Creating a Soft Focus Vignette in Photoshop CS5

 

For a prior tutorial, I demonstrated how to create a vignette effect around
the subject of a photograph, using Lightroom 3
. Today we’ll take a look at a
subtly different technique, which is to create a “soft focus vignette”
around the central part of your image. It’s a trick I taught myself a while
back and for some images like the one shown in this article, I like the
effect it has of focusing the eyes on the central parts of the image,
without brightening or darkening the edges or requiring an extensive crop.

Step 1 – Duplicate the Background layer, then convert the new layer into a
Smart Object by right-clicking the highlighted portion of the layer and
choosing “Convert to Smart Object”. After a few seconds you should have a
small icon attached to your duplicate layer, showing you that it is now a
Smart Object (and soon to be a Smart Filter!).

colortrails_smartobject

Step 2 – Select the Elliptical Marquee tool, placing the edge of the
crosshairs on the top and left boundaries of your image canvas, and then
click and drag all the way down, until the marquee edges are touching the
bottom and right boundaries of the canvas, then release. You should now have
an elliptical selection around the center of your image.

colortrails_selection

Step 3 – Press Command-Shift-I (Mac) or Control-Shift-I (PC) to invert the
selection you just made.

Step 4 – Choose Filter > Blur > Box Blur and with the Preview option active,
experiment with different slider values. When you find a blur amount that
you like, click OK to create the Smart Filter and accompanying layer mask
(the mask will be generated from the selection you made in steps 2 and 3).

Step 5 – Select the Smart Filter’s layer mask, and then set the Feather
value in the Masks panel to a relatively high value. I typically set this
between 100 and 250 pixels to make sure there is a smooth transition between
focused and blurred areas, a well as to ensure the blur doesn’t cover any
important details. (Note that blur strength and mask feathering here are
made less subtle so they’re easier to see in the small screenshots.)

colortrails_blur

That’s all there is to it! When you finish you should see the result of your
feathering in the Layers panel when you view the mask, and the image will in
turn have a nice soft focus effect around its periphery. And because we used
a Smart Filter we can go back at any time and change the Box Blur value
without degrading image quality, and we can also change our mask feather
value anytime we like as well!

colortrails_final

Some other posts by Dan Moughamian

About the author

Dan Moughamian wrote 26 articles on this blog.

Dan Moughamian is an experienced photographer and educator, and has worked with Adobe Photoshop since the early 1990s. He also has extensive experience with Photoshop Lightroom, Photoshop Elements, plugins from Nik software, and many other digital imaging products. As a long-time member of their testing programs, Dan has collaborated with Adobe Systems to help enhance many of the core functions in Photoshop, Lightroom, and Elements. As an educator, Dan's focus is to help photographers at all levels get the most from their digital workflows. Tips on raw editing, layer masking, alpha channels, image adjustments, HDR photography, focus and lighting effects, and perspective correction, are just a few examples of the topics he covers. To learn more, you can visit Colortrails.com

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2 Responses to Creating a Soft Focus Vignette in Photoshop CS5

  1. Photo master on February 19, 2012 at 3:58 am

    Excellent post. Thanks ………..

    Fotoclipping.com

  2. Photo master on February 19, 2012 at 4:14 am

    good work…

    ClippingImages.com

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