Now is the time . . .
If you are like me, and you live somewhere that experiences seasons, you know now is the Winter of our discontent. I do not enjoy Winter as I don’t have the opportunities to shoot Infrared like I do the rest of the year. That, and I am not real found of the cold, …but let’s not go there. Winter is my time to reflect back on what I’ve shot and then try and get a little artsy.
Mirror images are a great way to create something new based on old work. The techniques has been around for a long time and it is not real difficult to set up. You simply take an image, copy it and then flip it and attach to the original image.
The trick is starting with the right image, and then picking the right spot to crop for the mirror effect.
Here’s some examples of mirrored images.
The original image was made at last years Great Smoky Mountains Workshop, in Super Color Infrared.
Here’s a moody house by a lake.
It’s really just a small boat house in a park.
The interesting thing is when you mirror an image, often you will see shapes take form. For example, in the image above; do you see the face in the center in the clouds? I did not create that one, it just became visible when I made the mirror image.
Do you see the Heart? The face? Angel wings?
I will admit, I saw some of this before I started and that’s why I cropped it where I did.
One more.
I see a lions face in the center of the image. Do you see it?
So, let’s make a mirror image.
I’m going to start with this.
This was also made at last years Great Smoky Mountains Workshop. It’s a Super Color Infrared image that has been color channel swapped.
Once I have my image open in Photoshop, I need to create a new canvas for my mirror image.
I’ll click File, then New.
Since I know that my original is 8×10, I’m going to create a larger canvas that is more than twice the width of my original. In this case 22 inches wide and 9 inches high. This gives me some wiggle room, and I’m going to just crop it out when I get done. Here’s my new canvas.
Now I need to decide where to crop my original image. Using the Rectangular Marquee Tool I’m going to decide what part of this image to use.
In this case, I’m going to mark this image cropping off the area to the left.
Then I will select Image, and Crop.
Now I’ve got the image I’m going to mirror.
I will drag this image into the new white canvas I created, putting it all the way to the right
Next, I’m going to flip the image. To do this I click Image, Image Rotation, Flip Canvas Horizontal.
Then I am going to drag the same image into the canvas again, line the two up, and crop out the unneeded canvas.
And here’s my mirror image.
Now . . . Do you see it? I honestly didn’t until I pieced the two images together. We have faces in the image. I didn’t realize it was there when I cropped the image.
I’m an animal person, so I see a monkey and a dog. What do you see?
That’s all there is to making a mirror image. Once you try it, it’s not that hard, and it is interesting to see what you find. It’s definitely better than going out in the cold.
I hope you found this useful and will try and make your own mirror images. If you do and create something you like, consider sharing it on our Facebook page. You can find us here
If you want to see more mirror images, click here.
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Dan Wampler
Dan Wampler is a digital artist from St Louis, MO. Having been interested in art and photography since childhood, he spent most of adult life working for Kodak and in the portrait photography industry. A student of the works of Ansel Adams, Any Warhol, and David Hamilton, Dan attempted to keep a wide range of artistic style.
As an early adopter of digital imaging, he found it gave him a way to completely incorporate art and photography. Began shooting Digital Infrared in 2004, and had first camera converted in 2006. His work has been seen in numerous gallery shows, is featured in an iTunes app. He produces Infrared and natural color digital art for sale and teaches his post-production techniques online.
Dan is LifePixel's Creative Director, social media manager, lead blog author, main workshops and training sessions instructor. His images appear in this gallery and throughout the website.
If you have a topic suggestion or request feel free to shoot him an email at danwampler@lifepixel.com
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Karen says
What a lot of fun!!!!!! So glad I came across this. I have not taken many landscapes in IR so not a lot to work with at this time but gives me ideas for new things to look for. I did mostly color flowers playing with this. Thanks so much.
Richard Haars says
When I Crop at the right spot, I flip the image horizontally. Then I loose the original cropped image. How do I save the the original to match up for the mirror effect? Not sure where the image is to drag into canvas.
Dan Wampler says
Hi Richard,
If you follow the steps in this piece you will get the correct results. You Crop the image the way you like, drag it to a new canvas, flip the new canvas and then drag another copy of the cropped image onto the new canvas again. Good luck!
Karen says
to get the cropped image over to the new page you can also do
“control A” and then “control C” to copy it, go to the new page and be sure it is the ‘hot’ page then do “control V” to paste it to the new page, then the ‘move’ tool to put it where you want it. go back to original cropped photo, ‘deselect’, rotate the image and do the above again to get the second image into the new page.
Pete C says
I also see a Darth Vader like helmet in the trees at the very top of the falls. So the falls look like his body and cape.
Really enjoyed these mirror images!
Mark Davis says
Thanks Dan I have used this previously and it can be a lot of fun with all sorts of critters in the new image. It can also work on simple images and sometimes I clone out a cloud, tree or fence line just so that the images are not perfectly symmetrical – sort of a spot the differnce for a viewer.
Hali says
That is fantastic I will have to try it.
Jon Peterson says
Cool….
Dan says
Definitely want to try this.
Richard says
Mesmerizing pictures!! You have excellently used Photoshop and edited the pictures. I am learning PS and this article will surely help me. Thanks Dan for sharing this post 🙂