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Replacing Photos, Wall Art, and TV Images in Photoshop

Lesson 50 from: Real Estate Photography

Philip Ebiner

Replacing Photos, Wall Art, and TV Images in Photoshop

Lesson 50 from: Real Estate Photography

Philip Ebiner

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Lesson Info

50. Replacing Photos, Wall Art, and TV Images in Photoshop

Lessons

Class Trailer

Introduction to Real Estate Photography

1

Welcome to Class! What Will You Learn? Who is this Course For?

03:48

Real Estate Photography Basics

2

What Gear Do You Need as a Real Estate Photographer?

09:36
3

Camera Settings & Modes to Use for Real Estate Photography

07:54
4

Can You Use a Smartphone for Real Estate Photography? Pros & Cons

03:13
5

How to Compose Real Estate Photos - The Basics

04:58
6

Lighting Basics for Real Estate Photography

07:43
7

The Window Pull: How to Make the Exteriors Pop

02:01
8

RAW vs. JPEG Photos - Which Should You Shoot?

00:51
9

Key Lesson: What Photos Do You Need to Capture?

15:04

How to Take a Real Estate Photo

10

Basic Room Photo Demonstration with Flambient Technique, Natural, and Flash

10:54

Real Estate Photography Demonstration I - Full House Demo

11

Introduction to this Demo

00:54
12

What Equipment is in my Real Estate Photography Kit?

02:58
13

Walkthrough of the House - Let's See What We're Working With

07:20
14

The Kitchen - Part 1

12:08
15

The Kitchen - Part 2

04:20
16

The Kitchen - Part 3

03:16
17

The Kitchen - Part 4

02:41
18

The Kitchen - Part 5

02:34
19

The Primary Bathroom

09:48
20

The Primary Bedroom

07:15
21

The Laundry Room

06:03
22

The Living Room

10:28
23

A Small Space Bathroom

05:19

Real Estate Photography Demonstration II - Full House Demo

24

Introduction to this Demo

05:00
25

The Living Room

07:48
26

The Kitchen

06:35
27

Bathroom 1

06:12
28

The Primary Bedroom

07:20
29

Bathroom 2

05:46
30

Front Exterior

03:19
31

Back Yard & Exteriors

06:09

Editing Real Estate Photos

32

Introduction & Basic Editing Process for Real Estate Photography

04:31

Adobe Lightroom for Real Estate Photography - The Basics

33

Adobe Lightroom Introduction for Real Estate Photographers

06:36
34

Organizing Photos for Efficient Editing in Lightroom

07:12
35

Basic Editing Process in Lightroom for Real Estate Photographers

21:12
36

Combining Bracketed Photos in Lightroom + a Comparison of RAW vs Bracketed Photo

04:43
37

Natural Light Kitchen Edit

04:06
38

Exporting Photos from Lightroom

06:23

Photo Editing Skills You Should Know

39

Copy and Paste Settings from One Photo to Another in Lightroom

02:58
40

Create & Use Presets in Lightroom

02:26
41

Sky Replacements in Photoshop

06:50

Flambient Editing Process

42

Step-by-Step Flambient Editing Process

20:56

Full Editing Demonstrations

43

Editing the Kitchen Dining Nook

18:48
44

Editing the Primary Bedroom 1

12:04
45

Editing the Primary Bedroom 2 + Removing Objects in a Photo

17:04
46

Editing an Exterior Photo with Sky Replacement

06:36
47

Editing a Kitchen Photo with a Natural Designer Style Look

05:30
48

Quick Bathroom Edit

05:13

Advanced Editing Tips & Tricks

49

Speed Up Your Flambient Workflow with Photoshop Actions

05:18
50

Replacing Photos, Wall Art, and TV Images in Photoshop

05:04
51

Darken TVs in Lightroom

01:11
52

Clean Up Smudges on Stainless Steel Appliances in Lightroom

02:03
53

Editing iPhone photos vs. Professional Camera Photos

04:41

Virtual Staging

54

What is Virtual Staging? What Tools Should I Use?

02:14
55

Virtual Staging in Photoshop with Generative AI Features

10:56

The Business of Real Estate Photography

56

How to Deliver Photo Files to Clients

03:50
57

Tips for Creating a Real Estate Photography Portfolio

03:50
58

Creating a Quick Portfolio Website with Adobe Portfolio

06:01
59

How to Find Your First Clients

04:06
60

How Much to Charge for Real Estate Photography Services

02:32

Aerial Photography

61

The Basics of Drone / Aerial Photography for Real Estate Photography

06:27

Conclusion

62

Conclusion

01:23

Lesson Info

Replacing Photos, Wall Art, and TV Images in Photoshop

In this lesson, I'll show you how to replace photographs or artwork with stock photos that or other photos that you might find online. For example, this is a photo of me and my family. But if I was selling this house, I wouldn't want us to be in this photo up here. I found this photo right here. This is just a random landscape photography photo. I use un splash dot com for a lot of stock photography. It's free to use. It's good to give credit to our photographers out there. So shout out to CAL visuals who took this photo. Big sir. So the first thing to do is get your photo or your image as close as possible to what you're replacing. So I'm gonna zoom in here over here to this part of the fireplace and drop the opacity of the photo on top quite a bit. And then I'm going to just kind of move this down until it covers the whole image. Then I want to fix the angle to do that. You can hold the command key on a Mac control on A PC and then take any of the edges or corners and it basically wa...

rps the photo so you can kind of manipulate it. So it looks like it's tilted back, pull one side, forward, angle it so that it kind of matches the frame here. So I'm gonna do this and then I'm gonna make the whole thing a little bit smaller. You could even just take each corner and pin it there. This is not a uh square photo though, so I don't want it to get too squished. So something like this might look good. I'm gonna bring back my opacity to make sure it looks fine. So that's the first step. But then what I'm going to do is I need to cut out part of this image because obviously, we have these frames in front of it and this other stuff. So to do that, I need to make a selection. Let me see what happens if I take my quick selection tool and I paint over this image, I could do it this way, although that's not perfect and the edges don't look that clean. Although let's see if I just Yeah. No, I'm gonna do it manually. Sometimes that might work. I'm gonna take my polygonal lasso tool and just get in here and follow the edge because the edge of this image actually has some chromatic aberration going on with that purple line. But because it's a little blurred out, we're gonna get a little bit of forgiveness for not getting these lines. Exactly. Perfect. So I'm just gonna go around here, go around this little rock thing that's sitting here up and around this and then close off like that's fine. Then I'm gonna zoom out and for my go back to my polygonal lasso tool. I think my feathering, I'm just gonna put out one pixel and then what I'm going to do is I'm going to select the stock photo, turn it on. There's different ways you can do this. But one of the most forgiving ways is to actually use a layer mask. So I'm going to create a layer mask with this photo. And now what I'm going to do if this is set to white and I press delete it, deletes the inside of this selection. So we need to inverse our selection which you can do by going up to select inverse or shift command I on a mac and then press the delete key. Now I'm gonna get out of that mask and you can see that it did a pretty good job at blending in there. Now, I need to add a little bit of a blur here that's going to match the blur that I have with the other photos. So I'm gonna take a blur Gaussian blur and let's just do something that's gonna match like 1.3. It's pretty good and maybe even add a little bit of a drop shadow, select that later layer double, click it a super small drop shadow. So it kind of blends into the frame a bit more, something like that pretty good. And remember we're zoomed in on here and the full quality if we zoom out. Hey, that's pretty dang good. So those are the steps to doing that. This is a pretty complicated photo. Sometimes you can get away with um no blur, you can get away with not having to mask it out, but I wanted to show you this whole process so that you know, the steps in case you do need to do those things. All right. Thank you so much for watching and we'll see you in another lesson.

Class Materials

Bonus Downloads

Practice_Photos_for_Editing.zip
Step-by-Step_Flambient_Editing_Process.pdf

Ratings and Reviews

Chris
 

The course is a comprehensive learning experience and Philip's passion and expertise in photography and teaching are evident throughout the course. Key highlights for me included mastering lighting techniques, photo blending for high-quality interiors, and advanced strategies like the 'Flambient' process. This was straight forward, and easy to understand. I live in Australia an grateful that you kept the information relevant to any country.

TONY BARNES JR
 

Hey Philip, Just want to thank you for putting in the time and effort putting this course together. I’ve been shooting for 20 years but never really spent enough time on PS. This course really focuses on what you really need to know. Everything is really straight to the point. Philip provides images so you can follow along and really get a good work flow going. I personally enjoyed the

user-8ef1fb
 

Overall, the completeness and depth of this course are excellent. The only thing that needs improvement is during the editing portion. Philip's voice was fading in and out even when the volume on my computer was set at 100%. His voice was excellent during the photo shoot portion of the course.

Student Work

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