NPhoto

Double exposure effect

James Paterson creates a quick and easy double exposure effect in Affinity Photo with layer blending

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Craft simple double exposures in Affinity

One of the strongest aspects of Affinity Photo is the number of different options you have for blending photos together. Many of these features are on a par with Affinity’s premium rival, Adobe Photoshop.

Layer blending modes are fun and very easy to get to grips with. They work by combining the pixels on one layer with those on the layers below. So by dropping one image on top of another, then changing the blending mode, we can begin to merge two or more images in all kinds of creative ways. There are 31 blend modes to experiment with (as opposed to Photoshop’s 27), so by combining several images with different blend modes, the possibilit­ies are near-limitless.

A classic approach to layer blending is the double or multiple exposure effect. This mimics the look of old film multiple exposures, where a single frame of film would be exposed twice or more to create a series of overlaid images. In-camera, this would be done by winding the frame back to expose it again.

We can replicate this look with the Screen layer blend mode. This works in a similar way, by combining the brightness values of the pixels on the blend layer with those on the layers below.

As such, bright areas will only stay the same or get brighter, never darker. Once blended, we can go on to fine-tune the positionin­g of each image that makes up our composite. This way, we have complete control over the effect. The results are unpredicta­ble, fun, and endlessly creative…

Copy and paste

Open the portrait and the two blend images (multi_01-03) into Affinity Photo, then make sure you’re in the Photo Persona (top-left icon). Go to the multi_02 image, then press Cmd/ctrl+c to copy it, go to the multi_01 portrait photograph and hit Cmd/ctrl+v to paste it in place.

Position another image

Copy in the multi_03 image, then, again, choose a blend mode (we picked Screen again). Just like before, use the Move tool to experiment with positionin­g until the layer fits neatly with all of the others. An image with a bright edge, like the skyline here, works well for multiple exposure effects.

Combine pictures

As well as using images of your own (or those supplied by us), you could also download free photograph­s, like this, from Pixabay.com. Once more, this is blended with the Screen blend mode and positioned to fit in with the rest of the photos. Add any other shots you like into the mix.

Blend the layer

Go to the Layers panel on the right. Click the blend mode dropdown at the top and hover over the different options on the list to see how they blend the two images together. The Screen option is ideal for multiple exposure effects like this, but you may find a different mode that you prefer.

Boost the tones

Once all the images are blended, fine-tune the positionin­g until they all work together in harmony. Finally, click the Create Adjustment Layer icon in the Layers panel and choose Curves. Drag the curve line down slightly to darken the image as shown, and make any further tonal adjustment­s you like.

Fine-tune placements

Grab the Move tool from the toolbar and click on the corner of the blue bounding box around the image to resize and reposition the top layer. Do this until the placement works with the layer below. You can rightclick during this to choose Transform, if you decide that you want to flip the image.

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