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I wouldn't be asking if I hadn't tried it myself, but the outcome isn't what I envisioned; the face I added looks either artificial or just terrible and unrealistic. Therefore, could anyone put together a Step-by-Step Guide using Adobe Photoshop to assist me in adding a fifth face to Mount Rushmore using one of the pictures below and the files attached to this post?
The Fifth Face I want to add, along with George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln, is Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
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Just some clues as to why the sample result doesn’t work, it’s mostly because there are so many visual inconsistencies between the sculptured heads on the mountain and the edited painting that was digitally added to the mountain:
The edited tonal range of the added painting does not match up with the mountain. For example, both the highlight and shadow tones of the added painting are much lighter than the highlight and shadow tones of the mountain sculptures. The highlights are so light that they are almost blown out to white, and as a result they don’t match the more gray-ish stony texture of the mountain sculptures.
The painting views the subject from directly in front with his eyes gazing straight across to the viewer, but the mountain sculpture portraits are seen from a low angle with their eye gazes looking across, far above and past the heads of the viewers below, because the photo looks up at Mount Rushmore from the ground. This inconsistency will be difficult to fix in software, it will help a lot to have traditional portrait painting skills (the skills taught from the Renaissance up to digital editing) to adjust the angle of the new head to match the others.* Unless you can find a photo of him from a much lower angle.
Aaaaaaand then there’s the big one: In the digitally added painting, the shadows are on the opposite side compared to the shadows on the mountain, which looks fake because everything on the mountain must be lit by the same sun on the same side. It might be possible to address that in Photoshop by choosing the command Filter > Neural Filters, enabling the Smart Portrait filter, and changing the Light Direction option in the Global settings. Or, you just use a different photo that’s already lit from the other side.
*The Smart Portrait filter mentioned in the last paragraph has a head angle adjustment, but it only adjusts from side to side, not up and down. So tilting the head up to see it more from below will require manual repainting in Photoshop, or maybe automatic if you can find other software that can adjust head angle vertically.
It’s only going to look realistic if you fix everything above, and also make the tone, color, and texture of the added head match up better with the rest of the mountain.
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What you’re explaining, @Conrad_C examines why a digitally modified image featuring a painted head on a mountain sculpture (such as Mount Rushmore) fails to appear realistic. Here’s a summary of its main points:
Tonal Range Mismatch:
Perspective Differences:
Shadow Direction:
For the edited image to appear realistic, the following must be addressed:
Overall, the passage emphasizes that achieving a believable integration requires both technical skills in digital editing and traditional artistic knowledge.
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Was my reply run through AI to say the same thing again, just in a slightly different way? If so, there is one thing it said that misunderstood the reply.