Photo Plus

Tutorial 1

Dan Mold shows you how to use your free Snow Brush to add snowfall to your images in Photoshop Elements after you’ve taken the shot

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Use your free Snow Brush to add snow to your shots in Elements

If I said winter you’d probably think about shorter days, longer nights, a sharp drop in temperatur­e and, of course, fluffy white snow that coats landscapes and makes for a white festive season (if you get super lucky).

However, depending on where you live, a snowy spell is not always a guaranteed, so this month I’m going to reveal an easy way to add snow to your winter images. And on top of all this, the technique works in both Photoshop CC, and the budget

Photoshop Elements, which is what we used for this project.

You’ll need a wintery image, or you can use the Climber.jpg start shot featured here to try it out – you’ll find it in the Resources folder on your disc or download.

Whichever image you decide to try it out on, the effect will look its best if the scene looks wintry from the start, even our start image has some snow on the mountains already, but there isn’t any falling in the air. So we’ve brushed in some extra snow to make the landscape look more dramatic. It also gives you full control over where you want the snow to appear in the final product.

You’re going to need the Snow Brush, which you’ll find in the Resources folder. It’s a free brush, compatible with Photoshop that makes it a breeze to paint snow into your shots. There’s also a few tricks you’ll learn along the way, like customizin­g the brush settings and applying different levels of blur to the snow to make it look slightly out of focus. This adds a bit of motion to them and gives the impression that the snow is falling – adding to the realism. Here’s how you can pull it off.

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