Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Photographer John Chiara

John Chiara takes large format photographs with a huge (and I do mean huge) camera he built himself. Each photo takes him an entire day (more or less), giving an entirely new meaning to "Photo of the Day." Take a look:



Chiara's website

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Sunday, September 28, 2008

Free Texture: Love

Free for personal, non-commercial use ONLY. You may not sell or package the image with other items for sale. You may not repost the image or transfer it to another user. You can, however, post the link for those who would like to use the image themselves.



Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

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Free Texture: Fake TTV

This is, handsdown, the most popular texture I've made. It has gotten a ridiculous number of views on Flickr (or had, before it dropped out of my original account stream), and I've found it used on more of other people's photos than anything else I've ever made.

Free for personal, non-commercial use ONLY. You may not sell or package the image with other items for sale. You may not repost the image or transfer it to another user. You can, however, post the link for those who would like to use the image themselves.




Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

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Free Texture: Antique Upholstery

Free for personal, non-commercial use ONLY. You may not sell or package the image with other items for sale. You may not repost the image or transfer it to another user. You can, however, post the link for those who would like to use the image themselves.




Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

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Photoshop Tutorial: Converting a photo to a "drawing"






In Photoshop CS (and 7, I think):
1. Sharpen the edges.

2. Filter/filter gallery/stylize/glowing edges

3. Mess around as you see fit. It's all a matter of taste. I generally set my levels at 4 or 5, my edges usually at 4, and my fidelity varies. It's usually different for each image.

4. Image/adjustments/invert

5. Play with levels/contrast/color as you see fit.

6. Filter/filter gallery/artistic/cutout.

7. Again, what you do with this is all a matter of taste. You're done. :)

image & text copyright katie doyle all rights reserved - may not be reposted without permission

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Saturday, September 27, 2008

Photoshop Tutorial: Fake Tilt-Shift



Okay, so if you don't have cs or a later version of photoshop (and even if you do), here's how you can "miniaturize" your images (tested in ps7). i did it on the fly, so it's not as careful as i would have made it otherwise, and i see some spots i missed, but you get the general idea:

1. open the image in photoshop
2. hit "q" to enter quickmask function

3. choose the gradient tool from your toolbar on the left (or wherever you keep it anchored)

4. choose the reflected gradient from the upper toolbar/menu area. the reflected gradient is the 4th icon to the right, the one that looks like a cylinder turned on its side.

5. click the image and drag your mouse across it (up/down or left/right) where you'd like the focal point to be. this should leave a red highlighted area shaped pretty much like a diffuse cylinder and can drive you crazy, because the highlighted area will most likely NOT be exactly where you dragged the mouse. i have no answer for you on this but to be patient and make friends with ctrl-alt-z.

6. hit "q" to quit quickmask. your image should now be divided into 3 areas - your focal area and two others on either side or over/under it - and have the "marching ants" delineating each area.

7. choose your blur tool and set it for around 25%.

8. blur the areas that are NOT in your center focal area. just run that circle of blur all through each non-focal area until they're all nice and 25% blurry. don't overdo it.

9. click the rectangular marquee tool and deselect the marching ants masky stuff so you just have an image again...one with blurry sections and a clear middlish area.

10. reduce your blur to somewhere around 10% and blur a sort of transition zone between your clear focal area and the 25% blurry sections.

11. tweak curves so the light looks fake and the colors pop a little. this is an optional step, but i find it usually helps.

12. boost color saturation to around 20. eyeball it. bumping up the color makes it look more like a fake, but you obviously don't want a lot of grain.

13. mess with the levels a little if you want. at this point in cs, i tweak the shadows/highlights, but ps7 doesn't have that feature, i think (or it's under a different menu). sorry.

14. sit back and view your image with great satisfaction.

15. post it to flickr. :)

something to keep in mind: you can't really do this with something that has a strong foreground. you need an image with a pretty wide depth of field, like a landscape. it doesn't really work, otherwise.
image & text copyright katie doyle all rights reserved - may not be reposted without permission

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Thursday, September 25, 2008

Up and running :)

Finally! I can't believe we first talked about this project in 2005, and now 3 years later, we're finally beginning to get it off the ground. Even if it's just a blog (and snazzy new splash page, if I do say so myself!), I'm glad it's going somewhere at last. :) Look for tutorials, photoshop freebies, and anything else we feel like throwing at you. We have plans in the works, you know.

Smithers, release the hounds. :)