Is normal the screen where he says doesn't quite work well try inverting the image colors experiment and try changing the order of the layers too. The other thing you can do is you can feed the image out to blend as well and you can do that with traditional photography it just it takes a different way of doing it in the dark room in order to get that fade ability and then expose the other side fade ability the other way then you get some sharpness on both sides and then a fade blending in the middle
And I did a lot of testing with those 70s like velvet neon posters with multiple exposure or sandwiching because of exposed nicely you get these rich colors you get these nice dark black areas
I love playing with double exposures, but I take a lot of breaks. So I forget when I come back to it. When working with film do you take the darker image first and then take the lighter image on top? Or vice versa?
I recommend learning how to do this with film through the camera I would really recommend the Nikon FM 10 but I think there's a Kodak camera that's been circulating if there's a way to do this as well it's one of the few tricks they built into the camera they didn't quite list as a feature and that camera I think runs under 100 the Kodak model what about my Nikon FM 10 I think it was about $300
Now I own or I may have just lost in a storage somewhere a Nikon FM 10 manual SLR camera, and one of these features that I bought this particular camera for besides it being on manual was the bulb setting and you could do a multiple exposure that was the other feature built into this camera the simple little move I'm looking at that shot you showed in the thumbnail and all the multiple exposures I did to learn to understand that camera I don't remember them looking like the contrast you have this image where you got this bright white area then this really nice clean image of the lady behind it mind you and I did my multi exposure it was on the same exact film cell I also experimented with the same idea at my local film developer in a grocery store to my luck that man loved cameras he loved what he did he was a photographer in his own right but he would take the two negatives I chose and he would do what I call or what he called sandwiching them together and printing a shot sometimes it works sometimes it wouldn't so those are the two different ways I did multiple exposure kind of like shots the other way I didwas in photography class in the dark room where you would mask part of the image expose one film cell replace it with a new mask other films sell and then develop the print you just created through masking process as your manually doing the exposure and everything so just off the bat without watching the video this looks like you're doing a multiple exposure in Photoshop or affinity photo it doesn't look like the other ways that I know to do a multiple exposure. Event Nikon FM 10 that I owned it did kind of have a light meter built in so when you have pressed in the shutter button you would either see a green light for it looks like it's the right exposure or I forget what the other color was or no light at all but that was the limit of anything automatic in there and you didn't even need that light meter so if the battery died since this was a fully manual camera I simply had to know and understand and be accustomed to what lighting would be best for which f-stop and the basic things you need to know about photography so is the starter camera not being digital and I mainly worked with 100 speed film I got some stunning photos over the years not just a few ones that I took with that camera using ISO 100 speed film I was able to print beautiful pictures at movie poster sizes like a 20 by 30 I was able to put additional lens types on the front of the lens and get macro shots or get other techniques that you can do like really inexpensively like at a clear lens in the front use of Vaseline and I forget what they call that type of shot is a really good camera I wish I had it today the only thing holding me back now is how much it cost to get film and stuff developed cuz I don't have a dark room sports would be a lot cheaper
@@hemanthaligi5536 any laptop that has enough RAM memory to support the app will be good. You can check that with the store when you buy the laptop. We usually recommend getting the latest version of the app.
This is what I love about your tutorials - not merely "do this" but the explanation and demonstration of WHY. Thank you!
Thank you for your kind words and for watching!
Thanks to you, I finally know how to use the new gradient tool. That is a terrific video!
i really appreciate your explanation of how double exposure works, thanks a lot
Amazing. Very clear explanation! Thanks.
The best channel to learn photoshop and lightroom.
Appreciate your clarity
You have no idea how much I needed this tutorial 😊❤
We're so happy to hear that!
Thank you for another awesome video! You are my Photoshop Yoda!
Thanks for watching Heather!
Neat idea. I’ll have to try this.
Let us know how it goes!
Thank you Aaron. I always enjoy your videos. You explain things so well. Long time subscriber from a couple of different channels. Cheers from Texas.
Thanks for phlearning with us!
Dear Aaron Nack
Thank you very much for sharing for the tutorial.
Yoram from Israel
superb tutorial
Thanks for watching!
Thank you so much
Is normal the screen where he says doesn't quite work well try inverting the image colors experiment and try changing the order of the layers too. The other thing you can do is you can feed the image out to blend as well and you can do that with traditional photography it just it takes a different way of doing it in the dark room in order to get that fade ability and then expose the other side fade ability the other way then you get some sharpness on both sides and then a fade blending in the middle
Could Blend if work on the light one instead of levels?
And I did a lot of testing with those 70s like velvet neon posters with multiple exposure or sandwiching because of exposed nicely you get these rich colors you get these nice dark black areas
I love playing with double exposures, but I take a lot of breaks. So I forget when I come back to it. When working with film do you take the darker image first and then take the lighter image on top? Or vice versa?
I recommend learning how to do this with film through the camera I would really recommend the Nikon FM 10 but I think there's a Kodak camera that's been circulating if there's a way to do this as well it's one of the few tricks they built into the camera they didn't quite list as a feature and that camera I think runs under 100 the Kodak model what about my Nikon FM 10 I think it was about $300
good👌👌
So glad that I still have CS5. I own my work not Adobe
Now I own or I may have just lost in a storage somewhere a Nikon FM 10 manual SLR camera, and one of these features that I bought this particular camera for besides it being on manual was the bulb setting and you could do a multiple exposure that was the other feature built into this camera the simple little move I'm looking at that shot you showed in the thumbnail and all the multiple exposures I did to learn to understand that camera I don't remember them looking like the contrast you have this image where you got this bright white area then this really nice clean image of the lady behind it mind you and I did my multi exposure it was on the same exact film cell I also experimented with the same idea at my local film developer in a grocery store to my luck that man loved cameras he loved what he did he was a photographer in his own right but he would take the two negatives I chose and he would do what I call or what he called sandwiching them together and printing a shot sometimes it works sometimes it wouldn't so those are the two different ways I did multiple exposure kind of like shots the other way I didwas in photography class in the dark room where you would mask part of the image expose one film cell replace it with a new mask other films sell and then develop the print you just created through masking process as your manually doing the exposure and everything so just off the bat without watching the video this looks like you're doing a multiple exposure in Photoshop or affinity photo it doesn't look like the other ways that I know to do a multiple exposure. Event Nikon FM 10 that I owned it did kind of have a light meter built in so when you have pressed in the shutter button you would either see a green light for it looks like it's the right exposure or I forget what the other color was or no light at all but that was the limit of anything automatic in there and you didn't even need that light meter so if the battery died since this was a fully manual camera I simply had to know and understand and be accustomed to what lighting would be best for which f-stop and the basic things you need to know about photography so is the starter camera not being digital and I mainly worked with 100 speed film I got some stunning photos over the years not just a few ones that I took with that camera using ISO 100 speed film I was able to print beautiful pictures at movie poster sizes like a 20 by 30 I was able to put additional lens types on the front of the lens and get macro shots or get other techniques that you can do like really inexpensively like at a clear lens in the front use of Vaseline and I forget what they call that type of shot is a really good camera I wish I had it today the only thing holding me back now is how much it cost to get film and stuff developed cuz I don't have a dark room sports would be a lot cheaper
Which season photoshop
We used the latest Photoshop version. But you should be able to do it in older versions as well
@@phlearn i am bigganer which laptop and which version is better please reply
@@hemanthaligi5536 any laptop that has enough RAM memory to support the app will be good. You can check that with the store when you buy the laptop. We usually recommend getting the latest version of the app.
U forgot the part to explain how to have multiple images at once
And I really recommend if you really want to do this the old school way and have a whole different look and how to do this get a basic dark room
Thanks for sharing your experience with the community!
Why did I think it was so hard
This is such an easy to technique and the results are amazing!
@@phlearn I guess I always assumed it was hard