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Senin, 12 Desember 2011

How To Add Computer Graphics Using Adobe Photoshop - Part 1

By David Peters




Need to add special effects on your photographs? This specific tutorial will lead you through step-by-step with a number of How to Photoshop strategies, to help you include some great looking special effects to your digital photos.

So, you could find it beneficial to implement a masking onto your image to choose which parts you wish to alter by leaving untouched before you use any of these kinds of computer graphics. You could make a real smooth fade in between the areas using effects added in and others devoid of. This is called masking and may be carried out in many different means. One way is called the "quick mask mode", as described here;-

Choose the button named "modify in fast mask mode" inside your Adobe Photoshop software package. It looks like a circle inside a rectangular shape positioned close to the bottom level of the key tool bar. There's even a short-cut key: Q. And once inside quick mask setting, it is possible to choose as well as deselect regions by painting them with black and white respectively, using the standard brush tool. For best precision, zoom to A hundred or 200 percent. You can use a soft-edged brush in order to avoid rough perimeters. Once you are finished, quit the actual masking function and head to "Select - Feather" and specify your feather radius to around 5-10 pixels. You are able to establish your opacity to anywhere between 0 and 100%, enabling you to apply the effect stronger or weaker in one part of the picture than in the other.

Nevertheless moving on, and more complicated is introducing a layer mask. This allows you to apply any effect progressively from each and every point within your picture. Comply with these How To tips in Adobe Photoshop:

1) Choose "Windows - Layers".

2) Right click on the layer and select "Duplicate layer".

3) Click on the little icon in the bottom in the layer box known as "Add layer mask".

4) Pick the "Gradient tool" on the principal tool box.

5) Select a gradient type in the top "Options" bar.

6) Click on your graphic on the point that you don't wish to tweak, and then drag a button off to the actual point where you would like the complete effect to happen. The effect will be applied progressively more and more all along this line you've just designed.

7) Finally, return to the primary background layer and apply any sort of effect you would like. It will apply the effect in a soft, progressive way. Use opacity to convert the results down to less than complete strength if you wish.

It is possible to add "Gaussian blur" using the layer masking layed out above that can make the selected locations be seen soft-focused, as you had employed a large-aperture zoom lens. By using "Curves" you can create your edges darker as opposed to the center, duplicating the lens effects referred to as vignetting. Technically, vignetting is known as a zoom lens disorder, however subjectively it can increase an extra feeling to your photograph, creating a type of framework which will take a "sucking" effect, drawing more interest to the center of the picture. You may also just lower the actual contrast along with color-saturation all round your main subject, helping to separate it from the background muddle. Think outside the box with the different solutions provided!




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