Recreating Dave Hill Styled Photography
Dave Hill is one photographer that I have a lot of awe for. I love the way he creates his images. Some people may say that they are too stylised or cartoonish but after trying to recreate his work, I found that its a lot of work! Even a lot of the tutorials that are around don’t come close to what he does. I believe that I may have cracked it the Dave Hill secret finally. I do welcome feedback in regards to what I have created.
Here are the two images that I used to re-create his look. Please keep in mind that it was hard to find evenly lit images, so I just worked with what I got
Stock Image 1 for Dave Hill Tut
Stock Image2 for Dave Hill tut
Also keep in mind to achieve the best results from this technique, its best to use well lit, low noise images as when you begin to enhance them, the noise can really show!
Original Image and Final

Step 1
First thing to do is to even out the lighting in the image so that its more evenly lit. Create a curves adjustment layer. Fill the mask with black with the paint bucket. Choose a soft brush and switch the colours to white and paint in the sections that look too dark. You will end up with the following image:

You can see that the girl looks more evenly lit now.
Step 2
Create a new layer by pressing crtl-shift-alt-e and name it High Glamour. Next step is to apply the Imagenomic Filter Portraiture. Use the default setting High Glamour. Next step is mask out the back ground. Switch into quick mask mode and paint over all the skin. After all the skin has been masked out, exit quick mode. Invert the selection by pressing crtl-shift-I, then click on the mask icon to apply the mask. You will end up with the following image:

So you can see here that the skin has a higher contrast and more of a glow compared to the original image.
Step 3
For the next step, press crtl-shift-alt-e and create a new layer that is a merged version of all the previous layers and call it base. Now click on the channels tab, click on the green channel to activate it.
Then crtl click on the green channel thumbnail to select it. You will see a selection of all the light areas of the channel.
Now click back on the RGB channel to turn all the channels back on and go back to your layers palette with the selection still active.
Now press crtl-J to create a new layer with the selection. Crtl click on the new layer to select it. Crtl-shift-i to invert the selection. Click back on to merged layer that you created earlier and press crtl-J again to create a new layer. change this layers blend mode to multiply and change the layer above it to screen. Delete the layer named base as you don’t need it any more.
Put the two new layers into a folder and make the mask selection for this folder by crtl clicking on the high glamour layer mask, the with the folder selected, click on the layer mask icon. Viola new mask for the layer group in no time at all! You image should be looking like this now:

Step 4
Now it time to HDR up that background! Press crtl-shift-alt-e and create a new layer and call it Psychedlic. Use the topaz labs filter psychedelic setting to create a HDR looking background. The filter was just applied on it default setting.
You will notice now that the skin and the sky looks really yuck. Time to mask the skin out using the same technique in step 3.

Looking pretty good so far?
Step 5
Now the sky doesn’t really look very HDR does it? Take the second photo that you downloaded and drag it across to the photo you’re working on. Make sure that its on the top. Apply the Topaz Labs filter setting detailed on the sky. This just brings out the details subtly without being OTT.
Mask the sky out, easiest way would be to do with a channel mask, but that’s a tutorial for another day.
Now you’ve got an awesome sky and your photo should look like this:

Step 6
One last step, press crtl-shift-alt-e and create a new layer and change the blend mode to Overlay and change the layer opacity to 50%. Now add a Hue/Saturation adjustment mask and put the saturation down to -100. Right click on the adjustment layer and create a clipping mask, so that the Hue/Saturation layer only affects the overlay layer.
And there we go
Dave Hill syled image:




That looks AWESOME!!!! Can’t wait to try this out!
[Reply]
amazing…this tutorial is very well explained, and its VERY effective… thanks a lot for teaching us ^^
[Reply]
Dave hill uses lighting to achieve his effect. you cant do it with only photoshop.
[Reply]
admin Reply:
June 1st, 2009 at 1:45 am
Yes that’s very true, but he also does a lot of post production work to his images too.
[Reply]
Hi, good post. I have been woondering about this issue,so thanks for posting. I’ll definitely be coming back to your site.
[Reply]
Hi, very nice post. I have been wonder’n bout this issue,so thanks for posting
[Reply]
This is not even close to Dave Hills images
He’s mainly using light to create his signature effect, and (as he has said in a thread somewhere” he uses the plug-in Lucisart..
And most important: A lot of Dodge and Burn!
[Reply]
Anyone know how to do things like this?
[Reply]
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