It is very popular photographic trick to blend one photo into another. There are plenty solution over the network, but this one is somehow specific, because it is in spanish
Showing posts with label photoshop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photoshop. Show all posts
Thursday, September 20, 2012
Monday, November 12, 2007
Let's make it bigger
You are tired of this SOMETHING enlargment programm every day comming to your email? I'm too. Especially, because I know how to make an organ bigger without a chemicals. It is easy then ever, you just need one tool: Photoshop!
Give Someone A Big Nose
Using that free video guide you will know how to quickly and easily give someone a big nose using Adobe Photoshop. Wish you luck, in your enlargement experiments!
Give Someone A Big Nose
Using that free video guide you will know how to quickly and easily give someone a big nose using Adobe Photoshop. Wish you luck, in your enlargement experiments!
Sunday, November 11, 2007
Matrix Style Photos
Ok, I've not been writting for number of month, due some problems with my wife. She got in a car accident in end of summer, and only few days ago returned back from a hospital. So, I haven't got a spare minute to look through new style changing technologies.
But now I'm back, and I'm bad! I missed writting so much, so today I present you a perfect guide to creating matrix-like photos
CREATING MATRIX STYLE PHOTOS! - The most amazing videos are a click away
But now I'm back, and I'm bad! I missed writting so much, so today I present you a perfect guide to creating matrix-like photos
CREATING MATRIX STYLE PHOTOS! - The most amazing videos are a click away
Thursday, June 7, 2007
Changing Photos in Photoshop
Changing Photos in Photoshop
Have you ever thinked why the Hollywood stars always seems so perfect in the magazine photographs? Why is it they always look so perfect? Their haircut, teeth and skin always seem to be perfect and so beautiful. Is this the magic of stardom or Hollywood? No, this isn’t magic. It’s just Photoshop.
Photoshop is the same photo editing software program being used by professionals in the entertainment industry to make movie stars look younger, slimmer and better. They have been doing it for years and now you can achieve the same results with a little training and practice using Photoshop for some of these same photo enhancements.
You can learn to make amazing enhancements to any photograph using the tools and functions available in Photoshop. The following are just a few of the improvements you can make to people pictures.
Whiten stained teeth
Remove unsightly scars
Smooth age wrinkles
Clear up acne
Remove blemishes
Double chin removal
Fill in bald spots by adding hair
Open closed eyes
Remove tattoos
Hide body piercings
Change eye color
With Photoshop you can easily make yourself or anyone look better. You can even change the colors of the clothing people are wearing. You will be amazed by the results you can achieve with Photoshop. You will not only be able to improve the appearance of people but you will be able to completely remove people from the photograph, add people from other photos or change the background.
Master these Photoshop techniques and you will be in demand for photo editing and graphic design projects. People with these types of skills are in needed for photo retouching, web design work, logo design, advertising, and more. Not only can you have fun touching up your own photos but you could start a business doing photo enhancements.
Master The Basics Of Adobe Photoshop In Under 2 Hours With Easy To Follow Online Photoshop Video Tutorials. Full Details Here: http://www.learnphotoshopnow.com
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=David_Peters
Friday, April 13, 2007
Free Photoshop Brushes
Every good designer needs an arsenal of brushes to use within photoshop, whether its a grunge effect or some tehno swirls that are required there is sure to be a brush that fits your needs. Here we have dugg out the very best we could find. If there isn’t a suitable brush, we have also included some links on how to create your own.
Foliage Brushes - These brushes are big, and meant for print. You can use them for Web stuff as well, but you might need to size them down. Most of them are around 1800 pixels wide.
VPDesigns Omega Brush Set 200+ - Inside you will find grunge sets, vector/tech sets, cloud brushes, fractals, abstract sets, all in all there are some 200+ brushes within 9 collections.
Worn Photoshop Brushes For High Resolution - If you are new to the brushes that I make, you should know that they are mainly for working with materials meant for print. You can use them for Web stuff as well, but you might need to size them down.
Jenn B’s Hair Brushes - Small yet splendid set of human hair brushes based on her own scanned locks/curls and they look great.
Angryblue - A collection of grunge brushes and bloodspots etc.
Theese are the best for me. Much more you can discover in original page. Feel free to leave any comment you want.
Foliage Brushes - These brushes are big, and meant for print. You can use them for Web stuff as well, but you might need to size them down. Most of them are around 1800 pixels wide.
VPDesigns Omega Brush Set 200+ - Inside you will find grunge sets, vector/tech sets, cloud brushes, fractals, abstract sets, all in all there are some 200+ brushes within 9 collections.
Worn Photoshop Brushes For High Resolution - If you are new to the brushes that I make, you should know that they are mainly for working with materials meant for print. You can use them for Web stuff as well, but you might need to size them down.
Jenn B’s Hair Brushes - Small yet splendid set of human hair brushes based on her own scanned locks/curls and they look great.
Angryblue - A collection of grunge brushes and bloodspots etc.
Theese are the best for me. Much more you can discover in original page. Feel free to leave any comment you want.
Friday, April 6, 2007
Make photo black n white but keep lips red
Long time since last time posting, but I needed some time to fix my own problems. Today I bring you this great video lesson on Photoshop. The point is preety clear, how to make picture black n white, but keep lips red. Watch now and comment free!
Labels:
black and white,
colors,
photoshop,
techniques,
transformation
Tuesday, March 13, 2007
New Look: Transform to Black & White
With digital photography, it's easy to transform a photo you've taken to black and white. Some cameras even have this ability inside. But what to do if we need both identical pictures: black & white and colorful photo. There is a solution, we need to Transform Colorful Photograph to Black and White Picture! Why so, but not a vice a versa? It is a simple answer: it is easier to lose something (colors), than to give something (colors).
There are different ways for this transformation, so I offer you the one I especially liked. This tutorial video is specially created to demonstrate how easy can transform to black & white photo can be.
There are different ways for this transformation, so I offer you the one I especially liked. This tutorial video is specially created to demonstrate how easy can transform to black & white photo can be.
Labels:
black and white,
colors,
photoshop,
transformation,
tutorial
Wednesday, March 7, 2007
Glamour Photography Secrets
What is the glamour photography? How to differ the glamour photography from simple human portrait?
Glamour photography is the photographing of a model to emphasize the subject, instead of the fashions or products endorsed.
Standards of glamour photography have changed over time, reflecting changes in social morals. For example, in the early 1920s, USA photographers like Ruth Harriet Louise photographed celebrities to glamourise their stature. During World War II pin-up pictures of scantily clad movie stars were extremely popular among US servicemen. However, until the 1950s, the use of glamour photography in advertising or men’s magazines was highly controversial or even illegal. Magazines featuring glamour photography were usually marketed as "art magazines” or “health magazines”.
Photographers all over the world use special techniques for taking this kind of photos. The light and soft-focus lens are the main points. With Rembrandt Lighting, key light placement determines the modeling (shadowing) on your subject. As described above, placing this light at 45 degrees between camera and subject and about 45 degrees above subject eye level, will give you what is termed Rembrandt Lighting. This is perhaps the most popular type of portrait and glamour lighting. The key light will cast a shadow from the nose that falls down across the face, joining with the shadowed side of the face, leaving a “triangle” of light on the cheekbone. The nose shadow should not fall below the mouth line for best effect. You can make a face thinner by shooting the shadowed side (called short lighting) or more full by shooting the side lit by the key light (called broad lighting). In boudoir portraiture and glamour photographs we often want a soft focus look to add a romantic look to the photos or to conceal skin blemishes. Traditionally, this was done by putting various soft focus filters on front of the lens. There are two problems with this approach. First, you are then having to focus the camera through the soft focus lens which can be hard at times. Secondly, you are stuck with the amount of soft focus that the combination of lens, lens aperture, and filter provide.
Usually, this kind of photography is used by the "glossy magazines". So, if you can make it, than why don't to try? There are plenty of photo galleries to fill up with your glamour photos :-) And it doesn't matter that we leave the soft focus filters at home and use Photoshop to add the effect later, which allows us to add just the right amount of soft focus effect that we need.
Monday, March 5, 2007
Let's Remove Wrinkles
This tutorial shows how to remove wrinkles from a photo in just few easy steps, using Photoshop.
If you use other technique for removing wrinkles (I know some people do), feel free to leave a comment, so I can include it in the post.
If you use other technique for removing wrinkles (I know some people do), feel free to leave a comment, so I can include it in the post.
Thursday, February 22, 2007
Stencil Graffiti Guide
Melbourne is the proud capital of street painting with stencils. Its large, colonial-era walls and labyrinth of back alleys drip with graffiti that is more diverse and original than any other city in the world. Well, that was until a few weeks ago, when preparations for the Commonwealth games brought a tidal wave of grey paint, obliterating years of unique and vibrant culture overnight.
This may seem like no great tragedy to readers of the Daily Mail, but Melbourne's graffiti scene is a key factor in its status as the continent's hothouse of creativity and wilful individualism.
Melbourne became a hub of stencilling for reasons no one seems particularly able to explain. Its laid-back atmosphere and sense of isolation most probably have something to do with it. Painters there have never been as shackled to the New York school of large letters on subway trains that took a stranglehold everywhere else. Rather than scrawling their name across a window, most preferred to paint something a little different: a dog chasing a butterfly on a mailbox, for instance, or a couple kissing in the space left where an old poster has been ripped away.
More info on stencil graffiti in Melbourne you can find in guardian's article.
This may seem like no great tragedy to readers of the Daily Mail, but Melbourne's graffiti scene is a key factor in its status as the continent's hothouse of creativity and wilful individualism.
Melbourne became a hub of stencilling for reasons no one seems particularly able to explain. Its laid-back atmosphere and sense of isolation most probably have something to do with it. Painters there have never been as shackled to the New York school of large letters on subway trains that took a stranglehold everywhere else. Rather than scrawling their name across a window, most preferred to paint something a little different: a dog chasing a butterfly on a mailbox, for instance, or a couple kissing in the space left where an old poster has been ripped away.
More info on stencil graffiti in Melbourne you can find in guardian's article.
Thursday, February 15, 2007
Quick Sketch Creating Tutorial
Do you know, how to quickly create photo sketch using photoshop. Usually it take me for about one hour to find good propotion of applying whole heap of effects. Do you beleave you can make it without any effects, except Blur?
Watch this movie and greate respect to the author, which created it.
Watch this movie and greate respect to the author, which created it.
Monday, February 12, 2007
Tutorial Changing Eye Color
This is photoshop tutorial on changing eye color. Made pretty cool and even with Spanish comments. Now I know that post title is translated as "Mudando A Cor Dos Olhos " :-)
Saturday, February 10, 2007
Quick Change From Black-n-White to Colorful Photo
We've all seen beautiful hand-colored black and white photographs. A lovely shot of a child with lightly tinted cheeks and an armful of flowers, or a black and white beach with red and blue striped umbrellas. Perhaps you've wondered how it was done. Perhaps you've even assumed only professionals could create such images. The truth is it's actually quite simple once you know how. With the proper tools, anyone can create professional-looking hand-tinted photographs.
To get started, buy some black and white film. It's sold anywhere film is sold. Try Kodak Plus-x or Tri-x Pan. Next, go out and shoot! Landscapes, portraits-anything goes! For beginners, it's best to start with uncluttered photos, free of unnecessary details and distractions. A shot that is light in overall tone will work best.
Marshalls sells a great starter kit that includes 12 tubes of paint and everything else you will need, except the cotton swabs, waxed paper, tape, and pencils. This can be found at larger art supply stores, like Michaels or Aaron Bros.
Now that you have your photos and supplies, you're ready to get started. Find a workspace that is well lit (our dining room table works great!) where you can spread out. Take a piece of waxed paper and tape it down to the table. This will serve as your palette. Next, tape down your photo in front of you (tape underneath rather than on the surface of the photo).
Next, decide what colors to use. Paint larger areas first. Put a very small amount of paint onto the waxed paper. Apply paint lightly to the area you wish to color with a cotton swab. Blend it in well with a cotton ball. If it is darker than you want it to be, keep blending! If it is lighter than you want, apply more paint and keep blending until you have just the right shade.
Now.. have you gone over the lines? No problem! Get out your eraser and erase the edges until the paint is only where you want it to be. Is the color all wrong? No problem! Erase it all with the eraser, or start over completely by putting a little Marlene solution on a cotton ball and taking it off that way.
For smaller areas or finer detail, you have two choices. You can use the colored pencils, or you can use paint by twisting a tiny amount of cotton onto the end of a toothpick and carefully dabbing paint onto the area. This works well for lips and cheeks, and other very small areas.
If you want a truly nostalgic look, don't paint the entire picture. For portraits, you may want to just tint the hair, cheeks, and lips. For a field of flowers, painting just the flowers and not the sky or grass might look just right. Play around with it. Don't be afraid to make mistakes. Remember, you can always start over.
Once your image looks the way you want it to, let it dry for 24 hours before handling or framing. Soon you'll have beautifully hand-colored photos to share with family and friends. They make great gifts, and also look great on notecards and calendars. Have fun with your new hobby!
This article was found by using this forum, where you can found more information on editing photos.
To get started, buy some black and white film. It's sold anywhere film is sold. Try Kodak Plus-x or Tri-x Pan. Next, go out and shoot! Landscapes, portraits-anything goes! For beginners, it's best to start with uncluttered photos, free of unnecessary details and distractions. A shot that is light in overall tone will work best.
Marshalls sells a great starter kit that includes 12 tubes of paint and everything else you will need, except the cotton swabs, waxed paper, tape, and pencils. This can be found at larger art supply stores, like Michaels or Aaron Bros.
Now that you have your photos and supplies, you're ready to get started. Find a workspace that is well lit (our dining room table works great!) where you can spread out. Take a piece of waxed paper and tape it down to the table. This will serve as your palette. Next, tape down your photo in front of you (tape underneath rather than on the surface of the photo).
Next, decide what colors to use. Paint larger areas first. Put a very small amount of paint onto the waxed paper. Apply paint lightly to the area you wish to color with a cotton swab. Blend it in well with a cotton ball. If it is darker than you want it to be, keep blending! If it is lighter than you want, apply more paint and keep blending until you have just the right shade.
Now.. have you gone over the lines? No problem! Get out your eraser and erase the edges until the paint is only where you want it to be. Is the color all wrong? No problem! Erase it all with the eraser, or start over completely by putting a little Marlene solution on a cotton ball and taking it off that way.
For smaller areas or finer detail, you have two choices. You can use the colored pencils, or you can use paint by twisting a tiny amount of cotton onto the end of a toothpick and carefully dabbing paint onto the area. This works well for lips and cheeks, and other very small areas.
If you want a truly nostalgic look, don't paint the entire picture. For portraits, you may want to just tint the hair, cheeks, and lips. For a field of flowers, painting just the flowers and not the sky or grass might look just right. Play around with it. Don't be afraid to make mistakes. Remember, you can always start over.
Once your image looks the way you want it to, let it dry for 24 hours before handling or framing. Soon you'll have beautifully hand-colored photos to share with family and friends. They make great gifts, and also look great on notecards and calendars. Have fun with your new hobby!
This article was found by using this forum, where you can found more information on editing photos.
Tuesday, February 6, 2007
Photo frames
The best thing that visitors are now searching is "photo frames". They typically want to know, howto create beautiful borders around their photos. So, as I found this trick movie I give it to you, my friends!
Photoshop Tutorial - Creating A Border On Your Photo
Photoshop Tutorial - Creating A Border On Your Photo
Sunday, January 21, 2007
Adobe Photoshop CS Fast Track
This lesson will give the viewer an understaning of how layers work in Adobe Photoshop CS. training multimedia educational graphics compositing editing edit composite photoshop.
Adobe Photoshop CS Fast Track - video powered by Metacafe
Adobe Photoshop CS Fast Track - video powered by Metacafe
Sunday, January 14, 2007
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