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Free Photoshop Shapes: Download Custom Shapes Sets

October 22, 2009 by Barbara Holbrook · 2 Comments 

Free Photoshop Shapes: Download Custom Shapes Sets

Photoshop shapes are different than Photoshop brushes, although some people use the terms interchangeably, they refer to completely different tools. Both tools will allow you to easily add custom elements that be stamped out over and over again, used to create patterns, transferred from one design to another, and stored in your Photoshop library for use on your next project. The big difference between custom brushes and custom shapes is that brushes create a bitmapped element that is permanently... 

Photoshop Tutorial: Faking Darkroom Film Edges

July 31, 2009 by Charles McNally · 7 Comments 

Photoshop Tutorial: Faking Darkroom Film Edges

So far in my photoshop tutorials, we’ve covered quite a bit on how to fake the look of an old toy camera, with the Holga, LOMO/X-Pro, and Light Leaks tutorials.  These are fun to do, but if you really want to go all the way and to make people think you’re shooting film, this is the last (and really most important) step. Digital cameras trim the edges of your shot (as do a good amount of enlargers) so that you don’t actually see any edges – the image goes all the way to the... 

Photoshop Tutorial: Light Leaks, pt. 2

July 17, 2009 by Charles McNally · 5 Comments 

Photoshop Tutorial: Light Leaks, pt. 2

One of the coolest things about older cameras and toy cameras (such as holgas, dianas, lubitels and other gems) is that they have an element of unpredictability to them. If you haven’t shot on a camera before, you have no idea if there are going to be holes (usually around the edge of the film) where your film is accidentally exposed to light when it shouldn’t be, causing little colored blurs or white streaks. I showed you how to get white-blur light leaks in the last photoshop tutorial,... 

Photoshop Tutorial: Light Leaks, pt. 1

July 10, 2009 by Charles McNally · 1 Comment 

Photoshop Tutorial: Light Leaks, pt. 1

One of the coolest things about older cameras and toy cameras (such as holgas, dianas, lubitels and other gems) is that they have an element of unpredictability to them. If you haven’t shot on a certain camera before, you have no idea if there are going to be holes (usually around the edge of the film) where your film is accidentally exposed to light when it shouldn’t be, causing little colored blurs or white streaks. Now that I’ve shown you how to fake a holga photograph and how... 

Photoshop Tutorial: Getting that great X-PRO LOMO look

June 12, 2009 by Charles McNally · 6 Comments 

Photoshop Tutorial: Getting that great X-PRO LOMO look

Let me explain the title real quick, in case any readers aren’t in the know yet. LOMO is a russian optics company that makes cameras. They use the word Lomography to mean a wide-angle, shoot-from-the-hip, distorted colors, plastic lenses, expired film kind of photo asthetic. Another thing a lot of Lomographers like to do is x-pro, or cross processing. This is the act of developing one kind of film in the chemicals meant to develop another kind of fim. For a lot of photographers, this means... 

Software Review: Vertus Fluid Mask 3

June 8, 2009 by Charles McNally · 1 Comment 

I was a little hesitant when I signed up for this review. A masking program? I’ve seen quite a few masking programs that were hard to work with, with steep learning curves, bad tools, poor quality and more. I went in to it with pretty low expectations, to be honest, so I was blown away when I encountered the level of quality in Fluid Mask. Most of the time I create cutouts using photoshop layer masks and spend a lot of time zoomed in up close. It’s seemed to work pretty well — I thought... 

Photoshop Tutorial: Tilt-shift Miniature Faking

June 1, 2009 by Charles McNally · Leave a Comment 

Photoshop Tutorial: Tilt-shift Miniature Faking

Hello fellow photo editors! Today we’re going to learn how to make everything in your picture look like it’s teeny-tiny by simulating the extremely short focal plane that macro photography creates. It’s fake tilt-shift photography. Tilt-shift is actually kind of a misnomer for this, however, as tilt-shift lenses don’t quite get this same kind of effect. Thanks wikipedia! This is just a fun, quirky edit and works great for outdoor sporting events, parking lots, city-scapes... 

Photoshop Tutorial: How to Fake a Holga Photograph

May 20, 2009 by Charles McNally · 1 Comment 

Photoshop Tutorial: How to Fake a Holga Photograph

If you don’t already know, the Holga camera is a $15 plastic toy camera, made in China and celebrated by many photographers for it’s blur, vignette, light leaks and low-quality aesthetic. I’ll assume that you don’t want to go through all the hassle of using film, developing it, dealing with negatives and printing and storing and all the rest, so I’ll show you the best way I know how to fake a Holga image using Photoshop.  Read More →

Photoshop Tutorial: Plain Pic to Glamour Girl, Retouching Techniques. (part 2 of 3)

May 8, 2009 by Charles McNally · 1 Comment 

Photoshop Tutorial: Plain Pic to Glamour Girl, Retouching Techniques. (part 2 of 3)

Hello, and welcome back to our three-part photo retouching tutorial. If you haven’t seen it, you might want to check out part one, in which we cover blemish removal and eye/teeth whitening. For this part of the tutorial, we’re going to learn how to both blur and sharpen your subject to create pleasing results. I know that blurring and sharpening the image seems somewhat contradictory, but we’re going to use layer masks to paint these effects onto the image only where we think... 

Remove Moiré Patterns in Photoshop

May 7, 2009 by Barbara Holbrook · 1 Comment 

Remove Moiré Patterns in Photoshop

A TutorialBlog.org reader writes us today with a question about how to remove a moiré pattern using photoshop. Are there any plugins for photoshop to reduce/eliminate moire patterns? — William For those of you that don’t know, a moiré is an unsightly pattern that emerges when “two grids are overlaid at an angle, or when they have slightly different mesh sizes.” (Thanks, wikipedia.)  Read More →

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