Tutorial · Photoshop
How to replace a sky in Photoshop with a real sky photo
6 min read · by the Skybrari Editorial team
Photoshop's Sky Replacement tool (Edit → Sky Replacement) auto-detects the horizon, masks the old sky, and relights the scene to match the new one — in well under a minute. Here's the exact workflow for dropping a real Skybrari panoramic sky into your shot, and the four sliders that decide whether it looks real or fake.
Before you start
- Photoshop 2021 or newer (Sky Replacement shipped in the Oct 2020 release).
- A Skybrari panoramic sky JPG — pick one whose light direction roughly matches your scene.
- A photo where the sky is the weak point: an overcast listing exterior, a blown-out horizon, a grey travel shot.
The 5-step workflow
- Open your photo and choose Edit → Sky Replacement. Photoshop analyses the image and masks the existing sky automatically.
- Load your Skybrari sky. Click the sky thumbnail dropdown, then the + at the bottom of the panel to import your JPG. It's added to your sky library for reuse.
- Set the horizon. Drag Shift Edge and Fade Edge so the new sky meets your treeline or rooflines cleanly with no halo.
- Match the light. This is the step that sells it: nudge Temperature and Lighting Adjustment so the foreground colour matches the new sky. Warm sky → warm up the foreground.
- Output to New Layers. Set the Output dropdown to New Layers and click OK. You get a grouped, fully masked result you can refine non-destructively.
Pro tip
If the auto-mask clips thin branches or antennas, paint back detail on the sky group's layer mask with a soft low-flow white brush. Real skies (with genuine cloud edges) hide masking mistakes far better than flat gradient overlays.Why a real sky beats Photoshop's stock options
Photoshop ships with a few generic skies and will happily generate one. But buyers and viewers notice AI-perfect, physically-impossible cloudscapes. A real panoramic sky photographed in-camera carries true atmospheric depth, believable cloud edges, and consistent light — which is exactly what makes the composite invisible.
Get the skies
Every Skybrari sky is a real, in-camera panoramic photograph — never AI, never scraped. Browse 1001 skies in the shop (from $3, commercial license included).