Font Size

Posts Tagged ‘Design’

Novem… uh… DECEMBER’s give away!

Due to life being OBE (overtaken by events, not, as some of you think out of bodice experience), I managed to miss the drawing for November’s prize: The Filmmaker’s Eye: Learning (and Breaking) the Rules of Cinematic Composition. But not to worry! For December, I have Gustavo’s excellent book AND a copy of The Photographer’s Mind: Creative Thinking for Better Digital Photos. Both of these books are pretty cerebral in that they address perception in creating visuals. Both are outstanding titles, and I’m sure the lucky winners will be quite happy with them. Details on entering after the jump.

Share
Read more ...

The Filmmaker’s Eye

I recently received an advance copy of The Filmmaker’s Eye (Gustavo Mercado, Focal Press 2010), and posted a general review up on Amazon.com. You can get an overview there, so I wanted to expand on something I mentioned there: how this book impacts me as a photographer.

Share
Read more ...

Another Repoussé video up on YouTube!

The Photoshop Facebook page has posted another of my Photoshop CS5 Extended videos, this one also on Repoussé in the more mundane text arena. I’ve done something a little different than most with this in that I’ve chosen to do image element replacement and composite the text so it appears to be an actual part of the photograph.

I’m still getting a lot of criticism from folks who don’t see the point of 3D, some even claiming they can do everything in that video faster without 3D (trust me – it can be done, but it’s not faster, nor can you change the look at will). These folks probably won’t ever see the need or utility and that’s perfectly fine. I just don’t understand why they complain about a feature that they don’t have to use, or even pay for. “Hey! You gave me a spare tire with my car, but I have AAA! Are you stupid?” That’s how I see the complainers.

Anyway, I hope you enjoy the video. If you have any comments or suggestions for future videos, please drop me a line :)

Share

Taking up a challenge…

I received a comment asking about doing a DNA strand in PS CS5 Extended. I thought this would be an interesting challenge, so here’s the result:

You can see a larger version here. There is another one in the gallery that illustrates a more simple approach. The first attempt was done using a single Repoussé model and opacity masking. The one above uses multiple models, but all still within Photoshop.

The different approaches yield very different results, but it goes to show you can tackle virtually any problem in Photoshop in multiple ways. The single model only took about 45 minutes to figure out and fine tune. The result is not great (you can see the boundary region where the opacity mask reveals that it’s a surface, not a solid), but it was very quick and remains editable.

I like the look of the 2nd one quite a bit, but it was a real bear trying to line everything up.  It began life as a Repoussé object of the ‘spheres’, which were duplicated and rotated, then merged. From there, I used Repoussé again to create the sides, then lined everything up and merged again. The new Material Drop tool was a real life-saver here, because when you merge 3D layers, you are not combining objects. So everything has to be textured separately.

You’ll notice that the spheres have seams. Well, I got a little lazy and didn’t feel like trying to make them blend. I also had to interrupt the render because the shadows weren’t getting any better, and I ran out of patience. Plus, this model started to cause some instability in PS, but it didn’t crash.

Overall, I think I am just about at Photoshop’s limits for ad hoc modeling. Anything more complex than this and I’d fire up a dedicated package. In fact, I may rebuild this in Strata and compare the process.

Share

Short demo using Repoussé

I put together a quick demo showing how you can use a new feature in Photoshop CS5 Extended. This little video takes a simple selection and turns it into a 3D Maypole in just a few clicks. If you are interested in 3D from Photoshop, you should go check this out. A full tutorial is coming soon!

http://ow.ly/1AxDP

Share

You can turn Wacom pressure options on and off right up in the Options bar. When you have a tool that supports pressure sensitivity selected, click the pen icon over a transparency to control the Opacity and choose the pen icon over a bulls-eye to control the brush size. (via planetphotoshop.com)

Share
(more ...)

Are simple tasks taking longer in CS5 than CS4? Check out this tip fromMac Performance Guide: Edit your Preferences and adjust your Cache Tile Size to optimize your setup for the kinds of images you work on. MPG suggests just cranking it to 1024 and forgetting it. What works for you?

Share
(more ...)

Have you explored the blend modes available in Photoshop? If so, you can get to most of your favorites by using a shortcut: Shift + Option/Alt + (first letter of blend mode). For example, Shift+opt/Alt+M changes the current mode to Multiply. The shortcut list isn’t complete, but you can round out and update the shortcuts [...]

Share
(more ...)

Perpetually…

I'm tinkering with the new site. Bare with me while I try a few things out! In the mean time, check out my photo gallery.

Fun Stuff

Keep checking back for tutorials, tips, discounts, coupons, etc. relating to Photoshop and photography. I'm working on some deals with very cool vendors, so be sure to sign up for the RSS feed (when I get it going). Here from Facebook? Then you found one of the links (click on 'discounts' above).

108
Unique
Visitors
Powered By Google Analytics