Since the wine is darker than most of the foreground, a chunk of it disappears but that’s easy to fix. Darker Color was used here as it looks at the colors on all layers and keeps only the darkest ones it doesn’t blend any colors together. To make as much of the grassy foreground disappear as possible, activate the villa layer and from the menu at the top of the Layers panel, choose a different blend mode. You can also use layer blend modes to control how colors on each layer blend or cancel each other out. Now the color change only affects the villa layer. To restrict the color change to one layer down, click the icon at the bottom left of the panel (it’s circled, too). You can also use the Saturation slider to adjust color intensity. In the panel that opens, turn on Colorize (also circled) and then adjust the Hue slider to your liking.
Click the green checkmark beneath the image when you’re done. Drag within the box to reposition the image if necessary. If you need to resize it, peek in the Tool Options panel and make sure Constrain Proportions is turned on, and then drag any corner handle to resize the image. When the image opens, Elements surrounds it with resizing handles.Navigate to where the other image lives on your hard drive and click Place. Add another image to the document by choosing File > Place.When you’re finished, click the green checkmark beneath the image to accept the transformation (or press the Return key on your keyboard). To reposition the image, click and drag inside the box. Point your cursor near one of the corner handles and when it turns into a curved arrow (circled), drag to rotate the image to your liking.
If the image needs rotating, choose Image > Transform > Free Transform.Summon the Layers panel by clicking the Layers button at the bottom of the workspace.Choose File > Open and locate the image you want to base the composite on, such as the wine glass shown here.Fire up the Elements Editor and click the Expert button at the top of the workspace.
In this column, you’ll learn how to use Photoshop Elements to combine a photo of an Italian villa and a glass of red wine in order to create a version of Italy you can drink.Ĭombine the images into a single document, rotate and resize Whether you’re crafting a surreal piece of art or swapping heads, the process is similar in each program.
One of the most exciting projects you can tackle in image editing software that supports layering-Adobe Photoshop, Photoshop Elements, Pixelmator, etc.-is to combine images in interesting ways.