Recreate the Lomo effect in Photoshop

    Recreate the Lomo effect in Photoshop

    Recreate the Lomo effect: start image

    Our original image

    We all love the Lomo look, with its distinctive distortions and charmingly off-kilter colours. Sure, you can shoot with a cheap plastic lens or try one of the arty effects in your camera, but Photoshop is also a great way to get the Lomo effect without having to pay for the film processing. The key to getting this Photoshop trick is to introduce many of the ‘faults’ associated with cheap lenses, plus quirky extras like film grain and deliberately wrong colours. Here’s how to do it…

    How to recreate the Lomo effect in Photoshop

    Recreate the Lomo effect: step 1

    Step 1: Add a vignette
    Open the image you wish to start with and duplicate the Background layer (Ctrl+J). To mimic the vignetting you get with cheap lenses, go to Filter>Correct Camera Distortion. Set Remove Distortion to -7, and in the Vignette box set Amount to -100 and Midpoint to +10. Click OK (learn How to correct lens distortion in 4 steps).

    Recreate the Lomo effect: step 2

    Step 2: Soften the details
    To recreate the softness you get from cheap Lomo lenses, duplicate the layer that you have just adjusted, then go to Filter>Blur>Gaussian Blur. 
In the Radius field type a value of around 2.5 pixels, then click OK. For our shot we set the opacity to 70%. Then add some noise by adding a new layer, and use the same technique as in Step 2 on the Convert to black and white tutorial, but this time 
set Amount to 10% rather than 20%.

    Recreate the Lomo effect: step 3

    Step 3: Fade the colours
    To get the faded film look, create a new Levels Adjustment Layer. Select each colour channel from the drop-down menu in turn and adjust the middle slider to the following values: Red 0.85, Green 1.15 and Blue 0.90. Click OK.

    Recreate the Lomo effect: final image

    Our final image

    Top Tip: Simple is best
    The tell-tale Lomo softness means it works best with simple compositions. So when choosing your own shots, look for subjects that are easily recognisable, such as people, or simple shapes such as trees or buildings.

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    This entry was posted on Friday, April 27th, 2012 at 11:00 am and is filed under Tutorials. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a comment. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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    | Tutorials | 27/04/2012 11:00am
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