![]() Start by lowering the opacity of the face layer in the Layers panel. Now you need to match, as closely as possible, the new face to the features of the original image. Now you have the original image in a locked background layer and a second layer on top with the new face. Paste the face in this document using the shortcut Cmd + V or going to the menu Edit, Paste. You can now close the other one as you won’t be needing it anymore. Go to the tab or window where you have the recipient’s head. If you’re working in separate windows you can just click and drag to the other window without the copy command. Once the face is selected you can copy it by going to the menu Edit, Copy, or using the keyboard shortcut Cmd + C. For this tutorial, I’ll show you how to swap the faces in Photoshop entirely. Of course, you can select only specific parts like the eyes or the nose if that’s what you’re after. Here, you can select the face using the Lasso tool because you don’t need to be very precise.Ĭlick and drag around the main features of the face to include everything from the eyebrows to the chin if you want to swap the entire face. Go to the tab or window where you have the image of the face you want to swap onto a different head. To use this view you can go to the menu Window, Arrange, 2-up Vertical (or 2-up Horizontal, depending on what you need). The latter view is helpful as you can make sure the faces match for this kind of work. You can do this keeping them as tabs, which is the default view, or you can place them in separate windows if you prefer to see them side-by-side. You need to open both images in Photoshop. Credit: Andrey Zvyagintsev (left photo) and Anastasia Vityukova (right photo)
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