Tuesday, October 25, 2011

CD Cover Project

























You will be creating a CD cover of your favorite band or musical artist using Photoshop and a SLR camera.

1. First gather photos or artwork for your album cover. You will be creating a collage of photos and art for your CD cover.
2. You must take at least 1 photo that you have to include into your Album cover.
3, Open Photoshop and create a new document. 10.75 in wide x 5.25 in. high 300 resolution. Then you will make guidelines .25 inches around document.
4. Your album CD cover requirements: Band or Artist Name, Album name, song list, bar code, side bar, and minimum of one photo that you took, and photos and art for the cover.
5. You must have text effects on your text and or blending options (Drop shadow, inner shadow, bevel emboss etc)

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Halloween Tutorial




1. Choose a tutorial.
2. Take a self portrait of yourself with a scary pose!
3. Open Photoshop and import your photo.
4. Start the tutorial.

http://www.tutorialboard.net/top-15-best-halloween-photoshop-tutorials/

Monday, October 3, 2011

Outdoor Complimentary Photo Assignment






Complementary Color
Here we are talking about color schemes now, and in
this assignment, you will go out and create photos
consisting of complementary colors.
Your goal is to capture striking photos using opposite
colors in your image. Here are some sample websites
showing you how it can be done:
Complementary Color Photos 1
Complementary Color Photos 2
ASSIGNMENT:
Publish Post

Go out and take artistic and creative pictures that
are made up of complimentary colors.
Like the photo examples on the links above, your
Photography
Announcements
Assignments
Tutorials
Photography News
Photo Gallery
photos should be almost completely made up of
complimentary colors.
Once you bring your pictures in, color correct
them and crop them to get the best composition.
Cut out any excess background to make the
subject bigger in the picture.
I expect you to be thinking artistically and creatively
about your photos. Do not simply take a picture of a red
coke can lying on some green grass. Use all the lessons
we've learned so far.
TURNING IN ASSIGNMENT:
You will submit THREE JPEGS. Try to get three
different color contrast combinations.

Changing Color in Photoshop




Changing Color in Photoshop
Sometimes in post production you will want to change the colors of an object in your photos. Photoshop has a number of tools that you can use to change the color in an image, and in this post I’ll show you some of these which you can use without having to make a selection on the image.

Color Replacement Tool
On the Photoshop toolbar sharing a position with the Brush tool is the Color Replacement tool. For this tool you’ll need to select the color that you want to paint with and then click and paint over the image.

The tool reads the color immediately under the cursor as you start painting and looks for similar colors to paint over. This allows you to paint somewhat outside the lines and still replace only the color that you want to replace.
Using the Tool Options you can set the Tolerance to so, for example, if you are recoloring an area that is a fairly solid color, you can use a low tolerance to isolate the color. On the other hand if you’re recoloring an area where there is quite a bit of variety in the color because of shadows or texture, for example, you can increase the tolerance to recolor a wider range of colors similar to those under the cursor.
As you paint, you can let go the mouse button and click again somewhere else to change the sampled color so you can replace a different shade of that color, for example.
This tool is handy for detailed work as it allows you to resample and paint a number of times so that you can get in around certain areas avoiding other areas if you don’t want to paint over them.
The options with this tool include the Limits option which allows you to specify whether only areas of color contiguous to those under the sampling point of the brush are altered or if all matching areas under the brush are painted over. The Find Edges option attempts to preserve edge detail as you paint. Here I used Discontiguous to ensure the yellow inside the advertiser’s names on the bike was changed too.

The Color Replacement Tool must be used on a layer that has colored pixels in it so it’s best to duplicate the background layer and work on the duplicate layer. Then, if you make a mistake you can mask out the changes that you’ve made to the duplicate later to recover detail from the image layer underneath.
Selective Color
The Selective Color tool lets you adjust the colors in the image by selecting which colors to adjust and then adding more or less of another color to them. To use it, select Layer > New Adjustment Layer > Selective Color. Using it as an adjustment layer fix lets you later remove the recoloring from any part of the image by painting on the adjustment layer mask.

In the dialog you can select the color to alter from the Colors dropdown list. In this image I wanted to change the Reds so they are selected.
The color sliders below this show Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Black. It helps to understand these colors and their opposites; Cyan is opposite Red, Magenta is opposite Green and Yellow is opposite Blue.
So, for example, if you drag the magenta slider to the right, you will add magenta to the image but if you drag it to the left, you will add green – its opposite. The other sliders work in the same way.

This tool works well when you have an image such as this one where most of the color that you want to change (the reds) only appear in the area that you want to change and not elsewhere in the image. To change the color, drag the sliders to add more of the colors you want to add and to remove the opposite color.

Sometimes multiple colors contribute the color to the image so here I’ve knocked out some of the pink tones in the bike windscreen by adjusting the Magenta color too.
Replace Color
Another tool that you can use to change color is the Replace Color tool. To see this tool at work, select Image > Adjustments > Replace Color. This tool must be applied as an adjustment and cannot be used as an adjustment layer so, again, apply it to a duplicate of the background layer.

With this tool you click on an area in the image that you want to change the color of. Click the Add to Sample eyedropper and then click to select more of the color to change.
You’ll need to click on all the colors in the image that represent the color that you need to alter. You can test the result by dragging on the Hue slider at the foot of the dialog to see if the selection is accurate and that the color change is affecting the area you want to affect.
The Fuzziness slider lets you add more or less adjacent pixels to the fix – use it to obtain a smoother change from one color to the next. When you’re done, click Ok. Use the Saturation and Lightness sliders to tweak the effect.
The Localized Color Clusters checkbox can help refine the color selection so it’s worth testing to see if it makes a difference. Here it isolated the selected colors and removed a problem that I had with the number and the silver metal of the bike being recolored where it shouldn’t have been.

When you apply this fix to a duplicate of the original image layer you can add a layer mask to the top layer and use it to mask out any areas that are affected by the recoloring which should not be affected.