And then, I'm going to shift-drag across the blue of the sky in order to select a bunch of sky like so. I want it to be a light grey, like it is right now. You can see how it's turning grey here inside the little mask preview. And it looks like I'm selecting too much cloud action right there, so I'll click underneath it a little bit. And now what you want to do, notice this little area of clouds right here, these dark clouds, go ahead and click on it in order to make that a base for the selection. And then I'll go up to the Select menu and choose the Color Range command. Alright, now I need to mask the moon into place, so I'm going to go ahead and turn it off for a moment. Now I'm not really interested in the moon being this yellow, and so I changed its blend mode here in the top left corner of the Layers panel, to the last one in the list, Luminosity, which does a great job of picking up the blues from the sky. And then I'll press the Enter key, or the Return key on a Mac, a couple of times in order to apply that change. And then I'll Tab to the Y value and change it to 304. So I'll go ahead and click on the X here in order to select that value, and I'll change it to 698.
And I also have some specific position values. And now I'm going to move this moon up to this location here Now in the end, I came up with width and height values, which is why I'm linking the two together, of 22%, like so.
And now, just go ahead and drag one of the corner handles while pressing the Shift key to constrain the proportions of the moon, as well as the Alt or Option key in order to scale with respect to the center of the shape.
Alright, now we want to scale the moon and the best way to do that is to go up to the Edit menu and choose the Free Transform command. And then I'll choose Convert to Smart Object. So I'll right-click on the moon with my rectangular marquee tool. And now I need to scale the moon, but I want to do so nondestructively. Alright, now I'm going to rename that layer, Moon, of course. And then I'll just press Control + V, or Command + V on a Mac, in order to paste that moon.
Now I'll go ahead and move over to my lit windows composition and I'll click on the window layers, the top layer in the stack, to select it. And that's going to copy a flat version of the moon along with these three bats here. Now I'm going to copy everything that's visible, so I'll go up to the Edit menu and choose Copy Merged. That would be a Command + click on a Mac. And I'm going to select the moon, just by dropping down to the circular vector mask here inside the Layers panel, and I'll Control + click on it here on the PC. And so I'm going to start things off by switching over to the batface moon composition from last week. In this movie, we'll take our dark mansion with its brightly lit windows and we'll dress it up with this moon and a couple of bats.