@luis it's a good thing you use the original's hairline since, well, you don't have hair.
Thank you, I'm glad you like it :)
I'm insulted that you think those pictures of me aren't real! ;) lol Actually my focus on blending the two images has a lot more to do with color, hue, saturation and texture than with how I deal with the edges. I basically find a face that will work well in the position of the face I want to replace and position and resize it to match the original as close as possible. Then I use the eraser tool with a small to medium sized diameter and a hardness between 50-75 % to remove as much of my face as possible and let the original face show through. The idea is to keep my key features but use the skin, forehead, cheeks, hairline, etc of the original. Once I've removed as much as possible I adjust the color, hue and saturation to match the original as much as possible. Then the final step is to apply the right amount of texture and noise so that it matches the original. Easy :) Feel free to let me know if you have any more questions.
Got Milk ?
Hehe...Never knew You could mimic the sounds of a lightsaber...now how about a banta and a few angry wookies? :-p
*enraged old ladies (who live in the same neighbourhood as Tenyrafar) puncture his war drums*
Yay I'll make a bicycle stack just for you
Thank you. I'll get to some more macros soon hopefully.
hey you =>
Welcome to Flipshake!