| This slideshow design personalized with Smilebox |
Saturday, May 8, 2010
Saturday, May 1, 2010
Monday, April 26, 2010
Tutorial on photo restoration
1. Observe the damaged or flawed parts of the photo, and look for possible enhancements in lighting and/or color.
2. Crop out any soiled, crinkled, or excess edges.
3. Use the clone tool to replace the damaged areas with a matching color or gray tone. If using the healing brush tool be sure to select the "replace" feature.
4. Adjust the brightness and contrast to desired levels.
5. Use the burn tool to darken or soften areas with blemishes that you wish to be less vivid. Also use the Burn tool to bring out any dark patterns or letters that may have faded.
6. Use the Dodge tool to enhance the subjects or people in the photograph. When working on faces, only use the dodge tool on the light areas of the face, not on the cast shadows, or you will lose a feeling of dimension. The burn tool can be used to darken any faded cast shadows on the face, which will increase contrast.
7. Review the photograph for smudges, curves, lines, or patterns of pixel grain that seem unnatural. Touch it up with the clone or blur tool if necessary.
2. Crop out any soiled, crinkled, or excess edges.
3. Use the clone tool to replace the damaged areas with a matching color or gray tone. If using the healing brush tool be sure to select the "replace" feature.
4. Adjust the brightness and contrast to desired levels.
5. Use the burn tool to darken or soften areas with blemishes that you wish to be less vivid. Also use the Burn tool to bring out any dark patterns or letters that may have faded.
6. Use the Dodge tool to enhance the subjects or people in the photograph. When working on faces, only use the dodge tool on the light areas of the face, not on the cast shadows, or you will lose a feeling of dimension. The burn tool can be used to darken any faded cast shadows on the face, which will increase contrast.
7. Review the photograph for smudges, curves, lines, or patterns of pixel grain that seem unnatural. Touch it up with the clone or blur tool if necessary.
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Week 13
For this week, I took an old bent home photo (my aunts and uncles when they were kids), with some scratches, grit and pitted areas. I used the clone tool to remove most of these blemishes. In the photo, it looks like it was snowing, so I left some of the white spots in the picture, while making sure to remove most of the black spots that were most likely dirt or scratches. I darkened the clothing using the burn tool while brightening up their faces with the dodge tool. I increased the contrast and slightly brightened the photo. I also cropped the original.


Saturday, April 10, 2010
Saturday, April 3, 2010
Week 10
Collage made from Internet photos
For this image, I layered different objects. As you can see, the people at the base are pointing up at the car which is being pulled toward the ufos. I used the lasso tool to fill in a green glow around a car. For the orange car, I decreased the image size greatly, rotated it, and distorted it. I added the two small cars on the highway, and added shadowing and softened edges to the people below. It was difficult to cut out the detail in the hands of the people. I used the erase tool to clean up the edges.

Background Image

Collage made from 5 photos used for class assignments
For this photograph, I made the hue of the background into a blue underwater hue. I altered the opacity on all of the objects to make for a ghostly, sunken ship feel, with the fish moving toward the chandelier and the clown fish looking at the ball.

Background Image
For this image, I layered different objects. As you can see, the people at the base are pointing up at the car which is being pulled toward the ufos. I used the lasso tool to fill in a green glow around a car. For the orange car, I decreased the image size greatly, rotated it, and distorted it. I added the two small cars on the highway, and added shadowing and softened edges to the people below. It was difficult to cut out the detail in the hands of the people. I used the erase tool to clean up the edges.

Background Image

Collage made from 5 photos used for class assignments
For this photograph, I made the hue of the background into a blue underwater hue. I altered the opacity on all of the objects to make for a ghostly, sunken ship feel, with the fish moving toward the chandelier and the clown fish looking at the ball.

Background Image
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Week 9
For these jelly fish photos, I used the magic wand tool, the paint brush, and the hue and saturation tool. On the second picture I chose only to change the color of one of the jellyfish and I also added an "i love jelly" logo to the back of the bi standard's shirt. On the first photo I used the hue and saturation tool to colorize many different jelly fish and to add a face to an unsuspecting jelly.



For these photos I used the crop, quick selection tool, and the contrast and brightness tool. I used the quick selection tool to add some fish from another picture, adding movement and rhythm to the original. I darkened the two smaller fish, while lightening the two yellow fish in the foreground. I cropped out a yellow blur at the bottom of the photo.
For the second photograph, I used the crop tool to make the image smaller, putting more emphasis on the yellow fish. I also lightened up selected portions of the background and the subjects to create a more dramatic effect.


Original

Here I used the Dodge, Burn, and Sharpen tools. In one photograph, I lightened the light objects, such as the stones, the anemones, and the star fish, and sharpened the starfish. In the other photograph, I did the opposite, while sharpening some of the larger stones.
Dark subjects-light background

Light subjects-dark background

Original


For these photos I used the crop, quick selection tool, and the contrast and brightness tool. I used the quick selection tool to add some fish from another picture, adding movement and rhythm to the original. I darkened the two smaller fish, while lightening the two yellow fish in the foreground. I cropped out a yellow blur at the bottom of the photo.
For the second photograph, I used the crop tool to make the image smaller, putting more emphasis on the yellow fish. I also lightened up selected portions of the background and the subjects to create a more dramatic effect.


Original
Here I used the Dodge, Burn, and Sharpen tools. In one photograph, I lightened the light objects, such as the stones, the anemones, and the star fish, and sharpened the starfish. In the other photograph, I did the opposite, while sharpening some of the larger stones.
Dark subjects-light background

Light subjects-dark background

Original
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Monday, March 22, 2010
Sunday, March 7, 2010
Week 6 Part 2 - The Piano Series
For these photographs, I used a green round plastic chip over the end of my lens and worked on creating perspective using piano keys. In the end, I was trying for an abstract photo that gives the illusion of a city sky scraper, indicating that music comes from the city.
Experimentation



Original Images Below

Rotated

Sky Scrapers- taken with filter and then rotated

Experimentation
Original Images Below
Rotated
Sky Scrapers- taken with filter and then rotated
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)















