Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Creative Photography Ideas: Using Adobe Photoshop - Composites and Further Special Effects - cover

Creative Photography Ideas: Using Adobe Photoshop - Composites and Further Special Effects

Tony Worobiec

Publisher: David & Charles

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

Composites and further special effects is an excerpt from Creative Photography Ideas Using Photoshop which presents 75 comprehensive workshops that have been specifically designed for photographers; each offers a clever and creative technique that can be immediately applied.Composites and further special effects workshops focus specifically on creating composites; from dropping in a sky to producing sunbeams, using multiple files, blending mode, refine edge, the gradient tool, multiple layers. There are plenty of creative ideas that will take your photography that little bit further from creating a 'joiner' or 'still movie' to joining two landscapes and creating a mirror image.Each workshop offers ingenious creative techniques to immediately enhance images in Adobe Photoshop.From basic techniques to more advanced, all guidance is ‘best practice’ and shown via clear explanatory texts, photographs, ‘before, during and after’ manipulations and screen grabs.
Available since: 12/31/2012.
Print length: 162 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • Streets Aren't Watching - cover

    Streets Aren't Watching

    Tom McCaffrey

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Streets Aren't Watching is Tom McCaffrey's rap album under the moniker TMC. It coincides with the releases of Adventures in Comedy, his feature film and comedy album releases of the same title. Join Tom while he raps about why mo' money means less problems and why Scarface is overrated.
    Show book
  • Hacienda Style - cover

    Hacienda Style

    Karen Witynski

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Invite the rich colors, natural textures, and romantic beauty of Mexico into your home. With a vast  architectural legacy spanning four centuries, Mexican haciendas express a  rugged romantic beauty and compelling sense of history. Today, the  hacienda's graceful arcaded silhouette, grand-scale proportions,  carved-stone ornament, rich colors and natural textures have become an  ever-increasing influence for architects and designers worldwide.Hacienda Style invites you into Mexico's artful, hacienda havens  resplendent with private collections of colonial and contemporary art,  antiques and found relics. Witynski and Carr's antiques and accents have appeared in national  magazines, television programs and feature films, including  Architectural Digest, Western Interiors, HGTV's Takeover My Makeover,  The Oprah Winfrey Show, and The Alamo.Other books by the same authors: Mexican Country Style, The New  Hacienda, Casa Adobe, Adobe Details, Casa Yucatan, and Mexican Details.
    Show book
  • Prague - cover

    Prague

    Klaus H. Carl

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The Czech capital has a fascinating history of intrigue. It is a mixture of a past torn between Germany and the Austro-Hungarian Empire with remarkable monuments and a people whose soul rises above the events of the moment. It is the history of Central Europe in a nutshell, where Renaissance, Baroque, Gothic and Stalinist architecture compete side by side for attention.
    Show book
  • Mating Season - cover

    Mating Season

    Shane Mauss

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Shane Mauss, an honorary evolutionary psychologist, brings countless years of watching Animal Planet to aid in discussions of Snoop Dog, crouton factories, and other important things.
    Show book
  • The Dangers Of Our ‘New Data Economy' And How To Avoid Them - cover

    The Dangers Of Our ‘New Data...

    PBS NewsHour

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Roger McNamee was an early investor in Facebook and still holds a stake in the social media giant--but he’s also become a vocal critic of its practices, especially around how it handles user data. McNamee offers his humble opinion on why as consumers, we need to stop being passive and take control of how we share our personal information.
    Show book
  • Degas - cover

    Degas

    Natalia Brodskaya

    • 1
    • 10
    • 0
    Degas was closest to Renoir in the impressionist’s circle, for both favoured the animated Parisian life of their day as a motif in their paintings. Degas did not attend Gleyre’s studio; most likely he first met the future impressionists at the Café Guerbois. He started his apprenticeship in 1853 at the studio of Louis-Ernest Barrias and, beginning in 1854, studied under Louis Lamothe, who revered Ingres above all others, and transmitted his adoration for this master to Edgar Degas. Starting in 1854 Degas travelled frequently to Italy: first to Naples, where he made the acquaintance of his numerous cousins, and then to Rome and Florence, where he copied tirelessly from the Old Masters. His drawings and sketches already revealed very clear preferences: Raphael, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, and Mantegna, but also Benozzo Gozzoli, Ghirlandaio, Titian, Fra Angelico, Uccello, and Botticelli. During the 1860s and 1870s he became a painter of racecourses, horses and jockeys. His fabulous painter’s memory retained the particularities of movement of horses wherever he saw them. After his first rather complex compositions depicting racecourses, Degas learned the art of translating the nobility and elegance of horses, their nervous movements, and the formal beauty of their musculature. Around the middle of the 1860s Degas made yet another discovery. In 1866 he painted his first composition with ballet as a subject, Mademoiselle Fiocre dans le ballet de la Source (Mademoiselle Fiocre in the Ballet ‘The Spring’) (New York, Brooklyn Museum). Degas had always been a devotee of the theatre, but from now on it would become more and more the focus of his art. Degas’ first painting devoted solely to the ballet was Le Foyer de la danse à l’Opéra de la rue Le Peletier (The Dancing Anteroom at the Opera on Rue Le Peletier) (Paris, Musée d’Orsay). In a carefully constructed composition, with groups of figures balancing one another to the left and the right, each ballet dancer is involved in her own activity, each one is moving in a separate manner from the others. Extended observation and an immense number of sketches were essential to executing such a task. This is why Degas moved from the theatre on to the rehearsal halls, where the dancers practised and took their lessons. This was how Degas arrived at the second sphere of that immediate, everyday life that was to interest him. The ballet would remain his passion until the end of his days.
    Show book