For the purpose of this tutorial, I have already removed
the background of the horse image and saved it in Photoshop's own
format. You will see it only has one layer labelled "Horse"
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Make sure the Horse image is active (click on it if it isn't)
and click on the small arrow on the top right of the Layers
palette (if the palette is not visible press F7).
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From the dropdown menu select "Duplicate Layer". When the requestor
appears change the name back to Horse, and then set the Destination
to "waterfall.psd". This will duplicate our horse straight onto
the waterfall image as a new floating layer.
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You will now find the "horse" layer in the middle of your waterfall
image.
What we need to do now is turn it around and resize it. Making
sure the layer with the horse is active, select Transform from
the Edit menu. Next choose the Flip Horizontal command. The
horse changes direction.
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Press CTRL+T (or select Free Transform.. Scale from the Edit
menu). Hold down the Shift button and reduce the horse in size.
By keeping the Shift button held down the horse keeps its proportions.
When you are happy with the new size press Enter.
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Press "V" to activate the Move tool and position the horse
in the water so it is somewhere like the horse in my example
on the next page.
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Now that we have placed the horse in the water we need to make
a duplicate layer of it for the reflection. From the Layers
palette drag the Layer of the horse onto the Create New Layer
icon while holding down the ALT key. When you are given the
option rename the new layer to "Horse Reflection".
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From the Edit menu, select Transform and then Flip Vertical.
Press the "V" key to activate the Move tool and reposition the
new layer. See my example to get a rough guide. To adjust the
position slightly, use your cursor keys - the layer will move
1 pixel at a time. We now need to remove the parts of the horse
that are on the rock at the bottom of the image. To do this
we will use the Layer Mask option. This way if we make a mistake
or are not happy with the results we can always paint the horse
back in. From the Layers palette click on the first icon - Add
Layer Mask. Press the "D" key to return the colour palette back
to its default settings. Press "B" to activate the Brush tool
and select a small-medium brush from the Brush palette. Now,
with Black as the Foreground colour we can effectively Erase
the parts of the horse we don't want. If we make a mistake press
the "X" key to swap the Foreground and Background colours around.
Now we can paint the horse back in… in other words Erase the
Eraser!
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Carefully remove the horse by using the Brush on the rocks.
Remember you can undo any mistakes.
When the parts of the horse we don't need are gone, get the
Remove Layer Mask option from the Layers menu. Click on Apply
to accept our new work.
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Create a Layer Mask for the original horse and repeat the above
process - you need to remove the feet to give the impression
the horse is standing in the water.
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You will now need to reposition the horse again. Press the
"V" key to activate the Move tool and using your cursor keys
nudge the horse down slightly until it roughly matches up with
its reflection.
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Select the whole image by either pressing CTRL+A or choosing
the Select All command from the Select menu.
From the Image menu, choose the Crop command - this will remove
any parts of the image currently outside of our picture.
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With the Horse Reflection layer active select the Filter menu
and choose Distort and then ZIGZAG. Enter these values in the
boxes:- Amount=58, Ridges=8, Style=Out from Centre. Click OK
to apply our settings.
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Finally to make the appearance of the Reflection
layer more realistic adjust the opacity of the layer. Enter
a value between 55-68%. The reflection fades out slightly giving
us our reflection.