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Create a Ghosted Dancer Effect in Adobe Photoshop

Final product image
What You'll Be Creating
As we continue our series on effects inspired by music videos, one of the effects I find entrancingly beautiful is the ghosted figure effect.
The inspirational material for this effect features several clips of Adele singing. Each clip is very similar, but also distinctly different. Unless you are shooting your own video, it could be rather difficult to find multiple clips of a single dancer. Instead, consider using a fairly lengthy video of a dancer. That way you can pull frames from throughout the video and use them in place of the alternate clips.
To demonstrate this effect, I decided to use this clip from Envato Market of an elegant dancer in a flowing red dress.
Launch Photoshop and load the video with File > Open. Photoshop will display the first frame of the video file, and the Layers panel will show a Video layer within a Video Group.
Open the video file in Photoshop
If the Video panel is not open, go to Window > Timeline to open it. Notice the playhead handle in the timeline; drag it to the right to scrub through the video, or press the Play button to watch the video playback.
Open the Timeline panel
The approach here is to copy individual frames of the video and use those to create the ghosted images seen in the final effect. It may seem rather counterintuitive to use Photoshop to extract still frames from a video file, but it's actually very easy.
Use the playhead to scrub through the video to find a pose that is large and visually interesting, like around timecode 00:11:24.
Find the first frame to copy
Now go to Select > All to create a selection of the entire canvas. Then go to Layer > New > Layer Via Copy (Control-J) to copy that frame to a new layer. Photoshop automatically places that layer within the video group. Use the Layers panel to drag the new layer out and over the top of the video group.
Create a new layer from the copied frame
Notice in the Timeline that the new layer is added to the end of the video layer time. Grab it and drag it back to the beginning of the timeline so it appears at the 00:00:00 mark. Then set the layer Opacity to 50%.
Set the layer Opacity to 50
Use the same technique to create several other semi-transparent frames from the video. Here you can see frames pulled from the following timestamps:
  • 00:30:22
  • 00:34:07
  • 00:48:21
  • 01:06:21
  • 01:28:26
Duplicate several frames in the same way
Even with the reduced opacity, it's difficult to see all the duplicate copies. The lower copies can get visually lost. Hold down the Shift key while clicking in the Layers panel to select all the still frames. Then change the blending modes to Multiply
Batch change the blending modes to Multiply
Some of the elements are stacked too tightly together; the composition can benefit from spacing out the ghosts a bit. Select one of the layers that is difficult to see, in this case the topmost one, Layer 2. Then move it to the side until it is more clearly visible. 
move one layer to the side to be more easily visible
The movement of the layer reveals a hard line where the edge of that layer is now clearly visible. This can be easily removed with a Layer Mask. Go to Layer > Layer Mask > Reveal All to add a mask to that layer. Then use the Gradient Tool (G) with a Black to White preset gradient in the Linear shape. Start the gradient at the beginning of the layer's edge and pull it inwards towards the center.
Use a gradient on a layer mask to hide the hard edge
Continue moving the duplicate layers and adding layer masks with gradients to remove hard edges. Do this until the composition is clear and well balanced.
Arrange the rest of the figures too
Now that the "ghosts" have been created, it's time to clean up the final image and finish the overall effect. The source figure needs to be more prominent and visible and easily discernible through the cloud of duplicates. Also, the entire composition needs to be brighter and less muddy.
The original dancer image should be the most prominent. Grab the original video layer and go to Edit > Transform > Free Transform (Control-T) and Scale up the video layer up by about 40% (note: transforming the video will convert it into a Smart Object).
Scale up the original video layer
Go to Select > All (Control-A) and then Edit > Copy (Control-C). Then click on the topmost layer to make it the active layer and go to Edit > Paste (Control-V) to create another layer from the copied video frame. Set this layer's Opacity to 22%.
Copy the first frame of the video layer and move it to the top
Go to the Adjustments panel and click on the Curves icon to add a Curves adjustment layer. In the Properties panel, adjust the Curve so the top-right control point aligns with the right edge of the histogram. Then add a control point to the center of the curve and push it upwards to brighten the image.
Brighten the image with a Curves adjustment layer
Go back to the Adjustments panel and add a Hue/Saturation adjustment layer. Use the On-Screen Adjustment Tool to click on the background of the image and drag it to the left. Notice that the tool detects the Yellow tones of the background and begins to desaturate them. Pull the Saturation down to around -42 and set the Lightness to around +60.
Reduce the saturation of the yellow background with a HueSat adjustment layer
The ghosted dancer effect is complete! That wasn't hard at all, was it?
The same techniques can also be applied to create a time offset style effect that has the ghostly images following the dancing figure. This is also known as an "onion-skin" effect in animation or video editing.
Open the video in a new file again with the File > Open command. Be sure the Timeline panel is readily available.
Open the video file again
Locate a few seconds of the video that contains a very large motion, preferably one that covers a lot of horizontal space. For example, in this clip, the dancer does a twirl in the 10-13 second range. 
Locate a large movement
Use the Select > All and Copy, Paste method to copy frames from throughout the movement. The technique will work best if the frame grabs are evenly spaced. Every 15 frames of video is half a second, and that works as a good interval. 
As you paste in each frame and move it to the beginning of the timeline, name the layer according to the time code and set the Opacity to 20%. As the layers build up, you will see the effect starting to take shape.
Generate layers in 15 frame intervals
Use the Shift-click method to select all the layers in the Layers panel (excluding the video group) and go to Layer > Arrange > Reverse. The reverses the order of the layers, which puts the frame from earliest in the video at the top. 
Reverse the layer order
Set the Opacity of the bottom layer, called 13:00, to 100%. Each layer above that will have a blending mode of Multiply, and the Opacity setting will decrease gradually for each layer:
  • Layer 10:00 blending mode of Multiply, Opacity of 5% 
  • Layer 10:15 blending mode of MultiplyOpacity of 10% 
  • Layer 11:00 blending mode of MultiplyOpacity of 20% 
  • Layer 11:15 blending mode of MultiplyOpacity of 30% 
  • Layer 12:00 blending mode of MultiplyOpacity of 40% 
  • Layer 12:15 blending mode of MultiplyOpacity of 50% 
  • Layer 13:00 blending mode of NormalOpacity of 100% 
Decrease the layer opacities in gradual increments
Make sure the top layer is the active layer, and then go to the Adjustments panel and click on the Curves icon to add a Curves adjustment layer. In the Properties panel, adjust the Curve so the top-right control point aligns with the right edge of the histogram. Then add a control point to the center of the curve and push it upwards to brighten the image
Go back to the Adjustments panel and add a Hue/Saturation adjustment layer.  Use the On-Screen Adjustment Tool to click on the background of the image and drag it to the left. Notice that the tool detects the Yellow tones of the background and begins to desaturate them. Pull the Saturation down to around -52 and set the Lightness to around +55.
Reduce the saturation of the background with a HueSat adjustment layer
Photoshop's video capabilities are not nearly as robust as programs like Premiere or After Effects, but the simple fact that Photoshop can open and manipulate video files presents new opportunities for digital design. How did your time offset effect turn out? Feel free to share it in the comments below!
Final time offset effect

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