Posts tagged photoshop tutorial
An Image with Soft Focus Techniques
Sep 25th
Despite photography’s obsession with clarity and capturing detail, sharp focus isn’t the be-all and end-all. In some situations, the opposite is desirable. In some female portrait styles, a deliberate soft focus effect is used to evoke a sense of romance, or to create a dreamy, ethereal world. In traditional photography, the methods employed to achieve this range from dedicated soft focus filters, to gauze over the lens, to smearing a diffusing gel over a piece of glass on the front of the lens. Photoshop’s methods are equally varied, but offer a greater degree of control.
Following four methods usually use to achieve the range for dedicated soft focus filters.
Method 1: Gaussian Blur

Applied Gaussian Blur
Color Correction using Curves Adjustment Tool
Sep 25th
Correcting exposure will solve much basic color problems, but Photoshop’s extensive range of color correction tools can easily handle any that are left over. For example, overexposure or poor lighting conditions can give a photograph a distinctly washed-out look, which may persist when the initial fault is fixed. Photoshop offers several ways of boosting color.
One of photoshop tools that we usually used on regular basis is the Curves Adjustment tool, which not only help us in creating desire contrast, but at the same time it allow us to color corrects our images.

Take a look at the image we'll be creating.
Tutorial : Quick Color Correction
Aug 18th
Here is a 2 minute color correction technique picked up from one of Scott Kelby’s books. Its fairly simple, and it ranks as beginner-advanced. Here is the basic image before color correction.

A Glass Jar to be Color Corrected
Tutorial – “Vector look & feel”
Jun 24th

Tutorial : How to give a Image Vector Look and Feel
“Vector look & Feel”
Tools Used: Adobe Photoshop.
Here is an example that will teach you “how to give your image a vector look.” The following image of the mini car is selected for recreating into a vector form. The quality of the image is not so far an issue in this case, as long as, there is enough details to trace. More >