Results 11 to 17 of 17
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December 15th, 2008 01:38 PM #11
in my observation, mas ram leaky yung CS2. I would suggest getting a CS3 or CS4 portables version.
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June 23rd, 2012 10:36 PM #12
guys sino magaling sa photoshop sa inyo?
share niyo naman pano yung ganito. alam ko photoshop tong ginawa sa kulay niya e kaya gusto ko matutunan sana.
salamat!
sa net ko lang kinuha mga images kaya paumanhin nalang sa mga taong may-ari neto. :peace:
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June 24th, 2012 01:50 PM #13
Mainly the photos were editted in their exposure and color balance (less reds because that is the first color to fade if a print is exposed to the sun). The last one seems to have a few "light flares" added.
Personally I hate the "Instagram" look where the photos are artificially editted to have that faded look. I see it just a cover up for bad photography.
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June 24th, 2012 02:52 PM #14
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June 24th, 2012 10:48 PM #15
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June 24th, 2012 10:52 PM #16
you can also try playing around with filters and white balance settings sa camera pa lang.
edit: but, yeah, the samples you posted came out that way via post processing.Last edited by roninblade; June 24th, 2012 at 10:58 PM.
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June 25th, 2012 03:46 AM #17
here's how you do it
method1 fasterthantypingthis
1. duplicate orig bg layer, so you have 2 similar layers on top of each other on your layers palette. purpose is to adjust the colour setting for the top layer and erase the area you've chosen to be your foreground subject
2. select top layer-----image>adjustment>colorbalance
3. those photos are horrible, anyways, if you target a similar shade, midtone setting for cyan and yellow=-30s (around negative 30s) and magenta=+40s. leave luminosity box ticked. click ok.
4. to overexpose the image------image>adjustment>hueandsaturation
5. did i mention those photos are horrible? eraser tool brushsize=175(larger?) with hardness=50%
6. choose your foreground subj and erase it like hell. you can also use the polygonal tool with feathering for precise selection. you're done.
7. for cheap depth of field--------filter>blur>gaussian
8. for those glares, create a new layer, with the polygonal tool manually create varied shapes, fill it with white colour, blur it, and place two different glares on top of each other, the one on top should have an overlay filter on the layers palette
method2 likeapro
1. duplicate orig bg layer, so you have 2 similar layers on top of each other on your layers palette. purpose is to adjust the colour setting for the top layer and mask the area you've chosen to be your foreground subject
2. select top layer, use the polygonal tool and mask your foreground subject either precisely at the edges or anywhere close to it. you'll feather it later, anyway. then select>inverse since we are after the area for colour adjustments leaving fg intact.
3. make sure that the selection area is still active (moving ants), on your layers palette choose the add-layer-mask icon at the bottom. your second layer should have the duplicate bg icon with a small chain beside an icon that looks like pooh.
4. choose the pooh icon--------select>refinemask. by now you should notice a big t*urd, i meant a mask over your foreground subject
5. on your refinemask palette------feather=10 and you can contract or expand the mask if you wish via shiftedge. click ok.
6. choose your duplicate bg icon and do the method1 steps 2 to 4. those photos are still horrible.
7. you can always refine your mask setting by going back to method2 step 4 or simply dragging the mask icon to the trash without applying it, leaving the original and the duplicate layers untouched, otherwise you're done.
8. for controlled dof, duplicate top layer, choose the mask icon, (step4) feather and expand the mask. click ok
9. blur the image-----filter>blur>gaussian=1.5Last edited by Helios; June 25th, 2012 at 03:57 AM. Reason: espelling
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