Supplies
Computer with Photoshop, or a comparable photo-editing software, installed on it
Time
Patience
Instructions
Find a picture of the movie poster that you would have liked to be part of.
Make sure it is the biggest size and resolution possible. If making a poster out of it, then it will need to be at least 1000 pixels wide and possibly more. If it is only for the web, then probably no more than 500 pixels wide is fine.

Trying to match the lighting and the angles as closely as possible,take a photo of yourself or your model.
If the original picture was taken outside, then you have to do it outside really as the quality of light is so different and it makes it much harder to merge the tow images if they were taken under dramatically different light.
If the original was at night, then take your at night.
Try to get the light coming from the same angle. This is very simple to achieve, and worth paying attention to.
If you are only going to be dropping your head into the image then it doesn't matter what you are wearing as long as there is enough neck visible to be able to drop it in the image at the right angle.
Remember that not only should you be looking the right way and standing at roughly the same angle, but that the camera should be positioned so that the image looks in the same proportion as the one you want to drop into.
Look at the eye lines, look at the horizon line. The horizon line is not always visible in a picture, but it is always there. Above it lines and things arranged in the z axis of the image appear to go down towards it, below it, those same things appear to go up to it.
Author's Note: Imagine that you are looking at a book case. At your eye line you can't see above or below the shelves, but for the ones above your eye line, that you are looking up at, you can only see their undersides; and for the ones below your eyeline, that you are looking down at, you can only see their tops. So, in the photo you take, make sure that you or your model are arranged so that the horizon line of your photo matches that of the base image.
Act up the part, scowl, say cheese or generally try and look like you are in the scene and mean to be there, acting is half of the fun and half the battle to making it look real. Use a mirror if you need to so that you can see how good you look.
Using the lasso tool, so a rough cut so that you can drop it into the base image and move it about to see if it is about right. If it isn't, then you can always take another picture, rather than waste time cutting carefully round and finding it looks wrong when it is positioned.

Drag the rough cut out of you into the base image. It will probably come in on a new layer, depending on what photo-editing software you are using, but you might have to make a new layer and copy and paste the cut out into the image.

With the two parts of the image on separate layers, resize the rough cut of you to make it fit the base image.
Measure by eye the height of the head or some other prominent feature to make sure that the rough cut looks the right size. This is a visual thing so resize until it looks right.

This post has been edited by hardhat_cat: 16 June 2008 - 08:24 PM

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