I'm sure this has been covered on the forum and I remember Blue coming up with a brilliant way of removing the background but I can't find a single post covering it except one Dave did in Raw, let's hope Dave is not as ga ga as me. _________________
I'll try and get time to expand on this later but in essence, I was using Photoshop CS3 - but do believe that the process can be repeated in other editing programs.
RAW image was processed to expose for the foreground - sky was just a grey blank in the image.
I then used select by colour range - and selected all the different greys of the sky.
I then unselected the bits in the colour that were not sky related.
Then deleted the selection. This leaves just leaves the foreground - I had to redo process a few times as I was not getting it right at first.
I found a sky I liked - one that looked like it was right for the lighting on the foreground.
Copied it to a layer, place that layer below the foreground layer.
Result was OK but lots of halo all around the tree and between the branches were the original sky had been removed.
I then flattened the layers
Then used a duplicate layer to play around with selection of areas.
Whilst an area is selected, used replace colour selection to replace the blues and whites with a colour from the branch/leaves. Did this a lot, as I was working on small areas to get rid of the halos - needed to get deep into the image at some stages - that is looking at single pixels.
I will try and repeat what I did, along with some screenshots, when I get a chance.
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