Записи с метками ‘photoshop’

photoshoped

Среда, Декабрь 22nd, 2010

Australia / Melbourne / street art / graffiti / free photoshop background texture by Cuba Gallery - Now on Twitter!

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The Freaky Dolce & Gabbana Frankenleg Photoshop

Something very, very strange is going on with Polish model Anna Jagodzinska's leg in this D&G perfume campaign.

Actually, a lot of things about this ad look odd — including but not limited to the placement of Jagodzinska's and David Gandy's hands, the awkwardness of their embrace, how she's kind of going “Eh?” while he's all like, “Blue Steel, baby,” the angles of their lower bodies, and the way their eyes look lit from within. But what looks weirdest of all is going on right at Jagodzinska's left hip:

Luxury brands! They sever, clone, and reattach legs in post-production, just like us.

Nice Legs, Are They Yours? [The Life Files]

Send an email to the author of this post at jenna@jezebel.com.

photoshop manual 2

Пятница, Декабрь 10th, 2010

I Can't Paint, but I can Photoshop! by scraplyn2 (offline)

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Camera Raw 6.3 update

Windows Link:
http://download.adobe.com/pub/adobe/photoshop/cameraraw/win/6.x/Camera_Raw_6_3_updater.zip
Size: 34.9MB

Macintosh Link:
http://download.adobe.com/pub/adobe/photoshop/cameraraw/mac/6.x/Camera_Raw_6_3_updater.dmg
Size: 75.5MB

Description: This new version of the Camera Raw plug-in replaces the original one that was installed with Adobe Photoshop CS5, Adobe Photoshop Elements 9 and Adobe Premiere Elements 9 software.

Notes: List of newly supported cameras can be found at:
http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshop/cameraraw.html

Camera Raw 6.3 Read Me:
http://www.adobe.com/special/photoshop/camera_raw/Camera_Raw_6.3_ReadMe.pdf

Release Date: 12/06/10

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Пятница, Декабрь 3rd, 2010

The Karma Machine + Easy Photoshop Tattoo Tutorial! by vramak

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Adobe Products

Adobe is running a sale that knocks $50 off Adobe Photoshop Elements 9 and its Student and Teacher Editions of the various Creative Suite 5 bundles. However, Amazon, MacMall, Buy.com and B&H Photo have combined to slash CS5 Student and Teacher product editions and bundles by as much as 80%, which amount to savings as high as $1,775.00 on the full-fledged CS5 Master Collection. These Student and Teacher Editions are identical to the standard retail distributions, just offered to students and teachers at educational prices. None of the stores require customers to present educational credentials when purchasing the Student and Teacher Editions — meaning anyone can pay the educational prices — but EDU credentials may be required after purchase to obtain a valid serial number from Adobe.

If you have a friend that's a graphic designer or photographer, and you're really strapped for gifts this Christmas, how about giving them a TidyPSD?

For the meager (well, fairly meager) price of $9, TinyPSD will take any unorganized, jumbled-up PSD and turn it into a thing of Zen-like beauty. Sequentially numbered layers will be replaced with names! Unordered chaos will be replaced with layer groups!

TinyPSD aims for a 24-hour turnaround, but there's a testimonial on the site that suggests it can be as fast as one hour. They also accept bulk orders, which might be handy if you're a big design firm with sizable archives that need tidying up. Finally, if you're not happy with your TidyPSD, you can request a full refund.

Tags: lazy, photo, photography, photoshop, psd, tidypsd, tools, web

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Вторник, Ноябрь 23rd, 2010

Watercolor experiment in Photoshop by abduzeedo

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Photoshop Contest: Magazine Covers of the Future

Hey! Just cause that one guy isn't around anymore doesn't mean we can't have a little fun with Photoshop now and then! Kim Kardashian, hoverboard enthusiast? Who knew. What other celebrity covers of the future can you dream up?

I guess Kim Kardashian lamenting the lack of hoverboards would be a present magazine cover, not a future one, but you get what I mean. Mock up some covers you'd expect to see in the supermarket checkout aisle with a futuristic twist. It'll be funnay.

Send your best entries to me at contests@gizmodo.com with Future Magazine Covers in the subject line. Save your files as JPGs or GIFs under 800k in size, and use a FirstnameLastname.jpg naming convention using whatever name you want to be credited with. Send your work to me by next Wednesday morning, and I'll pick three top winners and show off the rest of the best in our Gallery of Champions.

And here, for your reference, is the original Kardash cover. How boring.

Good luck! [Things I Ate That I Love - Hi Emily!]

How Your Playboy Centerfold Sausage Is Made

It's not enough to make the cut to be a Playboy centerfold. Your nipples also have to be the right sort of pointy. Your butt has to have a “better curve.” Enter Photoshop. Here, a rare view into the process.

It's “The Year Of The Rabbit” at Christie's, which has put up for auction an array of Playboy memorabilia. The most interesting are the copies of Playboy centerfolds from the 1990s and early 2000s that are marked up by editors and the art department — and subjected to a panel that grades them with a composite score.

Having made it this far, just about all of the centerfolds scored in the late 80s. But Lauren Hill, the Playmate of the month in February 2001 and seen here, got somewhat harsher commentary: “'OK but nothing special. There is nothing going on in the face + eyes.” The scrawls on Hill's photo also found her nipples lacking and suggested her stomach be slimmed.

The nipples of Angel Lynn Boris, July Playmate of the Month in 1996, were also unacceptably pert, with a circle around her nipple appearing to lead to “soften.”

The greatest offenses among actual female flesh: Pubic hair stubble, veins, and the model's actual faces, which were frequently marked with the demand to “soften.” Stretch marks on breasts were also offensive, as Ulrica Ericsson, November Playmate of the month in 1996, would have learned by seeing hers called out.

So were nearly invisible stretchmarks on Brande Roderick's butt, which were circled with the annotation, “Kill stretch lines.”

Did you know that breasts can be “too rough”? The Playmate of the month in October 1998 is proof. Also in this photo, our favorite command: “Better curve to butt.”

It's not that post-production is always terrible — the models likely appreciated that the stray hairs and odd shadows were edited out. (”Kill single hair that touches cigar,” is an example of this). But the message is clear: even after a genetic bounty, all-but-certain plastic surgery and dieting, good lighting, a pro-photographer, and dozens of shots, even the fantasy woman is not fantastic enough. Ironically, it's that mentality, and its cookie-cutter sexual sensibility, that's helped make Playboy irrelevant in the years since.

Here, a few more screengrabs, with comments that are only partially legible. (Bonus: A mostly uncriticized Kelly Wearstler). Did we miss any good ones? Let us know.

“Kill veins” sounds rather painful.

Melissa Holliday, you aren't dream girl material until those unsightly abdominal lines disappear.

Hey look, it's celebrity interior designer Kelly Wearstler, aka September Playmate of the Month, 1993.

Sorry, Shauna Sand, I'm too distracted by your large pores to look at your boobs.

Year Of The Rabbit

Send an email to Irin Carmon, the author of this post, at irin@jezebel.com.

photoshop forever

Пятница, Ноябрь 19th, 2010

Video Tutorial - Photoshop Adjustments by Luis Montemayor

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You’ll have to color me silly, but I didn’t realize that it’s terribly annoying for a coder or developer to work through my mess of cluttered Photoshop files. Layers and vectors and colors, oh my, TidyPSD can tidy them up for you, but it will set you back a few dollars.

TidyPSD is a service that will take your unorganized elements, get them neatly nested into hirearchal folders, and then send the PSD file back to you once it’s all cleaned and ready. In some cases, those of us on the Photoshop side of the world don’t know how those on the coding side of the world prefer to work and that’s where TidyPSD really shines, for us. Having a Photoshop-literate coder organize your files just makes sense.

Now, the catch – it will cost you $29.

However, if you’re not in the mood to do it yourself, it’s still a great option. It should be noted that there are a number of tutorials across the Internet for making this an easy process to handle on your own, but TidyPSD isn’t about learning, it’s about lazy. Given our penchant for lazy-fied services, we’re happy to pass it on to you.

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Понедельник, Август 23rd, 2010

Quand on est aussi belle pas besoin de photoshop (not photoshoped) by Benoit.P

As a scrapbook enthusiast who fully believes in putting her computer and graphic programs to full use when it comes to altering pictures to fit my scrapbook layouts to perfection, I long ago became a fan of the software program Adobe Photoshop Elements. For the record, I am currently running version 3, though two newer versions are available. It has continued to meet my needs and I see no reason to run out and spend money on a new version just yet. Originally I chose it as a much cheaper alternative to the full fledged Adobe Photoshop, as it has always allowed for quite a large amount of photo editing, including such editing basics as converting color photos to black & white or sepia tone, and more playful alterations such as using artistic and special effect brushes.

Recently, I became aware of what is referred to as an Action when in discussion about graphic programs in general. An Action is a series of edits bundled into what appears to be a simple single action, but is actually a series of actions, allowing the software program the Action is run in, to alter your photograph in a much more detailed, yet much less time-consuming way than one would be able to do without the Action. If I have not lost you after that explanation, some examples of Actions that I have since used include turning a single photograph into numerous puzzle pieces or several photos into what looks like a film reel, all with little effort on my part beyond loading the photograph into my workspace and applying the chosen Action to it.

I had previously learned, wrongly, I might add at this point, that an Action could not be run in such a basic program as Elements, and needed a full featured program such as Adobe Photoshop. Thankfully I learned this was not so. While not all Actions made for Adobe Photoshop will run in Adobe Photoshop Elements, many will, some dependent on which version of Elements you are running too, so do keep this in mind if you decide to try out Actions in your own copy of Adobe Photoshop Elements.

To begin to use them, you first must install them into the correct directory and make sure that all elements of the Action are available for the program to read. This can involve various steps, some that beginning users might be a bit more reluctant to do than more advanced users, but really are not that difficult as long as the proper steps are followed.

For example, after installing a new Action to the proper file, double check that the Elements program itself is closed, then open the file Adobe on your hard drive, (on my computer, I left clicked once on My Computer, and double left clicked my C drive, which happens to be my local drive). From there I double left clicked Adobe Photoshop Elements (in my case Adobe Photoshop Elements 3), and continued to double left click Previews, Open Cache, open Effects Cache, and then selected and deleted the three files within. I then closed all of the folders. Once closed, you will reopen the program Adobe Photoshop Elements itself, so when the program loads, it will rebuild these three files you just deleted, in turn finding the newly installed Actions, and giving the program the opportunity to show the actions in the program's menus for easy access and use.

The simplest way to do any of this is to use a third party creator of an Action that has been designed for use in Elements. My favorites and the most straightforward Actions when it comes to installation I have found come from a website created by Panos Efstathiadis titled PanosFX. On this site are clearly written directions for downloading Actions to Adobe Photoshop Elements, and getting them up and running.

If you have always wanted to try some high-end graphic editing, but your budget cannot afford a high-end graphic program, this might be the solution to your dilemma, and all within even the tightest budget.

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During the hour I've been playing with it, the application has crashed quite a few times. There were also other bugs, like trying to load an image from the Photo library and failing, or uploading photos to limbo (it said the photos were uploaded to my Adobe Photoshop account, but they are nowhere to be found in my gallery).

This is too bad, because Photoshop Express is a) free and b) a very nice little app, simple enough to use to quickly modify an image and share it. I will not use it in this state, but hopefully Adobe will fix these problems quickly.

However, playing with it I got a craving for something very simple, which I hope Adobe can make (and which will be extremely useful for me and other desktop Photoshop users): Release an application to convert the iPad into a Photoshop control surface. I will love to display this application while I'm working on the image and quickly use it to apply filters and transforms. Or just access many of the Photoshop tool palettes, adopted to touchscreen use.

Send an email to Jesus Diaz, the author of this post, at jesus@gizmodo.com.

Regulating Photoshop: A Hazy Proposition, Not A Solution

While U.K. equalities minister Lynne Featherstone raised the issue of excessive Photoshop and image-manipulation by the fashion industry again this weekend, a lot of things about her plans remain unclear.

Featherstone — whose comments included a passing reference to the “fabulous” Christina Hendricks, which has already inspired plenty of mockery among headline writers — wants to convene a series of meetings this fall with the editors of fashion magazines and the advertising executives who oversee the production of most of the highly manipulated images we consume daily. Reports the Guardian:

The first will focus on airbrushing, which Featherstone argues is contributing to “the dreadful pressure that young people, girls and women come under to conform to completely unachievable body stereotypes”.

She will push for a Kitemark or health warning on airbrushed photographs, warning viewers that they are not real.

A Kitemark is a trademark used in the U.K. that certifies a given object meets certain minimum safety standards. Kitemarks are generally included on products like smoke alarms and bicycle helmets — things where the user's physical safety is paramount. The Kitemark is rarely, if ever, used to distinguish products that have been vetted for their potential effects on a consumer's mental health. It should be noted that no product is required to carry a Kitemark in order to be sold, but that the mark's endorsement is widely trusted.

So from this explanation, it sounds like the minister is calling for a system of regulation for image manipulation that will be essentially voluntary — and one for which the exact standards of what is and is not a valid image have yet to be enumerated.

Opponents to these kinds of regulatory schemes tend to follow one of two lines of reasoning. There's the high-minded argument about freedom of the press and freedom of speech — that no government should play any role in regulating what should be a matter for editorial discretion — and there's the nitty-gritty argument about the potential inefficiency and/or subjectivity of any such anti-Photoshop guidelines.

The first point is fair, as far as it goes — a very high burden of truth should be met before any kind of speech should be limited — but so much research has been completed that the negative effects of being bombarded with highly manipulated, perfected images are, at this point, fairly well-established. And besides, what Featherstone is proposing is essentially a voluntary industry code. The second point is where things get squishy. Photographers argue that digital post-production tools mimic darkroom techniques, and that consumers aren't aware of the extent to which all fashion photography has always been manipulated. As Jean-Baptiste Mondino said:

The photos of old Hollywood? Retouched! The iconic image of Che Guevara? Retouched! All the photos taken by Richard Avedon of Marilyn Monroe? Retouched! And all of this before today's software existed, of course. Legs were lengthened using a wide angle; skins were smoothed through overexposure.

This is true, but it's also disingenuous. While most Photoshop effects are in fact named for lower-tech procedures that have been performed since the dawn of photography — airbrushing, dodging and burning, and collage have all been traditionally used to alter fashion images — the reality is that these techniques were so labor- and time-intensive that they were rarely used consistently and in combination. What used to take hours in a darkroom can now be done in seconds. What used to be a one-shot procedure can now be reverted, re-attempted, undone, re-done, and tweaked again and again as necessary. Never before have images been so highly malleable, so easily “perfectable.” What used to be exceptional and difficult has now been made easy — and it's become the norm.

That isn't to say that there aren't a lot of gray areas. Would Featherstone propose that any picture that had been altered carry a disclaimer? What about removing a skin blemish or fixing a flyaway hair in post-production? What about smoothing over small scars or cellulite? What about minimizing rolls of skin where a model's body bends? What about fixing a wrinkle in a shirt? What about smoothing a visible vein? What about minimizing a funny shadow? What about taking an inch off someone's waist? What about four?

Some of these things are probably mostly okay, in that they are changes that don't automatically make a picture unfaithful to how a person really looks, whereas some of them probably are mostly not okay, in that they part company with reality pretty abruptly. Some of them may be all right individually, but taken together, result in an image that falls into the uncanny valley. The truth is that the reason we edit photos — “edit” both in terms of selecting the best shots and “edit” in terms of altering them after the fact — is because the human eye and brain perform an editing role for us already; a picture taken at the wrong moment, in the wrong light, or from the wrong angle won't reflect reality, and it's not a betrayal of this debate or these important issues to acknowledge that, sometimes, Photoshop can be used to make people look more like themselves. (In real life, you'd never focus on that stray hair — so why should it be left there to distract us in the picture?) Fundamentally, any “standards” the British fashion industry and the government come up with will have to be fairly flexible, and ultimately subjective.

What wouldn't be a subjective change, though, and what underlies everything, is the very real need for a wider range of body types to be valorized in the fashion industry. If models came in more varieties than just “straight-size” and — very occasionally — “plus-size,” and Photoshops of Horrors were nipped in the bud, then flipping through a fashion magazine might not be the inculcation into self-hatred it is for so many of us. Deciding what constitutes an acceptable or honest use of Photoshop is hard; booking a wider variety of models is comparatively straightforward and just as positive a step.

Fashion Industry Faces Airbrushing Clampdown

Send an email to the author of this post at jenna@jezebel.com.