Documente Academic
Documente Profesional
Documente Cultură
For this exercise you will start with a scanned photograph and make typical
kinds of adjustments. You will learn to use a variety of tools & functions including
• Crop, Measure
• Rotate
• Zoom Tool
• Variations
2. Open the picture of a girl and her ball -- file name <photo_album_scan.jpg> located on the
desktop.
File
Open
Desktop > Adobe Class > Exercise 1
Photo_album_scan.jpg
3. Working with the picture. Before doing any adjustments to the picture use the Save As
command and save the picture to the desktop with the file name <girl&ball.jpg> using
default settings. The picture has been scanned upside down along with another picture that
was on the same page. We are going to select and crop the picture of the girl.
HINT: When scanning a picture from a book it sometimes helps to put a black sheet of paper
behind the page to avoid any bleeding through.
b) Drag from the upper left corner of the picture of the girl to the lower right corner.
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f) From the menu select Image >Rotate Canvas >Arbitrary. Click in the radio button CW for
clockwise rotation. Click OK to rotate the picture.
g) Crop the picture again; this time make a selection that is just inside the border of the picture.
h) To flip the picture right-side-up choose Image > Rotate Canvas, then 180. Now the girl is
right side up.
1) Use the Zoom Tool to make the image 100%. Click on the Zoom Tool, then click on the
image. Every time you click with the Zoom Tool the image gets a little larger. To reduce the
size of the image, hold down the ALT key (note that a minus sign appears in the center of the
magnifying glass), and Click to reduce the size of the image.
2. From the menu choose Image > Adjustments > Variations. The Variations window
appears.
a) The two picture in the upper left are the original (note: you can click the original to reset
the image) and the Current Pick (what the picture looks like with adjustments).
b) The three pictures to the right adjust for brightness and include the options for Lighter
and Darker. The Current Pick in the center reflects the change for lighter or darker.
c) The seven pictures in the center adjust for color and provide a way to correct color with
the Current Pick in the center The pictures surrounding the Current Pick allow for
adjustments and show how the picture would look if you changed a color level in that
direction (for example, More Green, More Yellow, More Cyan, More Red, More Blue,
More Magenta) You can also effect Shadows, Midtones, and Highlights, and allow for
more or less Saturation by using the radio buttons. EXPERIMENT with these features.
Be sure the <girl&ball> window is the active window before proceeding. If it is not, then close
the Variations window, click on the <girl&ball> window and then re-select
Image > Adjustments > Variations.
3. Adjust brightness by clicking on the pictures labeled Lighter and Darker on the right-hand
side. Keep comparing the Current Pick (top row) to the reference picture.
4. Adjust color by evaluating whether any of the color variations are closer to the colors of the
reference picture. Pick a color variant or stick with the current setting. Use you own
judgement and color sense.
5. Click OK when you are satisfied with color and brightness. This closes the Variations
window. If you are not happy with your choices, then choose Edit > Undo Variations and
start over again or you can click on the original picture in this window.
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6. Another way to do these adjustments is to select Image > Adjustments> Auto Levels and
allow the system to make the adjustments for you. Sometimes this is adequate and
sometimes not. Again, just use your color sense.
Brightness/Contrast
Increasing contrast makes the light areas lighter and the dark areas darker; decreasing it makes
the light areas darker and the dark areas lighter.
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Tutorial Exercise Two- Retouching Photos
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6. Removing a color cast (or imbalances of color)
You will use Color Balance to correct the color cast.
Drag the top slider to the left (-15) Drag the middle slider to the right (+8)
In this case, you want to change the color of the tarp in the gondola in the bottom right corner
of the image.
a) In the Layers palette, select the Background.
b) Use the Zoom Tool to zoom in on the tarp.
c) Select the rectangular marquee and drag around the tarp.
d) Choose Image > Adjustments > Replace Color
e) Click the left eyedropper tool in the Replace Color
dialog box, and click once on the orange tarp to select it.
f) Then select the center eyedropper-plus tool, and
drag over the other areas of the tarp until the entire
tarp is highlighted in white in the dialog box.
g) Make the following adjustments: Fuzziness = 61 ;
Hue = 149 ; Saturation = -17 ; Lightness = -39
(Note that the color displays in the sample square.
For different colors, experiment with different settings.)
Click OK to apply changes.
h) Choose Select >Deselect
i) Choose File >Save.
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Adjusting saturation with the sponge tool
When you change the saturation of a color, you adjust its strength or purity. The Sponge Tool is
useful in letting you make subtle saturation changes to specific areas of an image. We will use the
sponge tool on the red and white stripped tarp covering the main gondola in the picture.
1. Select the Zoom Tool; magnify the small motor boat in the center of the
picture.
2. Select the Clone Stamp Tool
3. In the Clone Stamp tool bar make sure that the Aligned option is deselected.
4. Select Stamp size from the Brush pull-down menu.
5. Center the Clone Stamp Tool over the water between the large gondola and the post to its
right.
6. Hold down the ALT key and click this section
of water.
7. Drag the Clone Stamp Tool over the boat to paint
over it with water.
8. Choose File > Save
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Replacing part of an image
The sky is fairly drab and overcast in this photograph. You will replace it with a more interesting
sky from another file.
1. Select the Magic Wand Tool. Click to select part of the sky.
2. Hold down Shift key and click the rest of the sky to select it.
3. You will now open another file that is just a picture of clouds.
Select File > Open > Desktop > Exercise 2 > Clouds.psd
4. Choose Select > All; then choose Edit > Copy. Close the Clouds.psd file.
5. Return to the picture of the gondola. Choose Edit > Paste Into to past the clouds into the
current selection. Notice that a new layer has been added to the Layers palette.
6. Use the Move Tool and drag the clouds into the position you want.
7. Change the Opacity of the cloud layer to 55% using the Layers Palette. A lower
percentage will soften the look of the clouds; a higher percentage will make the clouds
stand out.
Adding Text
• Select the Horizontal Type Tool (T)
• Click the gondola image in the upper right corner
• Note that a text layer now appears in the Layers Palette.
• Font and font size and color selection choices appear in the "T" tool bar (reproduced below).
• Type Venice Is the Place. The text is automatically placed on the picture.
• Reposition the text using the Move Tool.
• Notice that the Layers palette now includes a layer named Venice with a T icon next to the
name, indicating it is a type layer.
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You will now want to flatten the image into a single layer.
1. Choose Layer > Flatten Image
2. Choose File > Save As. In the dialog box, type a new filename <gondola2>, select the
appropriate Format (jpg, tif, pict, etc.) and click Save.
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Working with a LOGO
The goal in this short exercise is to take a logo and make a modification to it. As an example, we
will use the U Caduceus logo and add a circle around it.
Go to the Health Sciences Center Office of Public Affairs image gallery page at:
http://www.med.utah.edu/pubaffairs/imagegallery/
1. (Note: If you want to save the image as a jpeg, then do Image > Mode > RGB Color
before saving.)
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Resolution
Image Resolution--the number of pixels per unit of length in an image; measured in pixels per
inch (ppi). An image with a high resolution has more pixels and therefore a larger file size.
Monitor Resolution--the number of pixels per unit of length on a monitor; usually measured in
dots per inch (dpi).
Printer or Output Resolution--the number of dots per inch produced by an imagesetter or laser
printer. Higher resolution printers combined with higher resolution images generally produce the
best quality.
Photoshop Tools
…. Jump to ImageReady
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File Formats
Bitmap -- Use the bmp. file extension. Used for photographs, scanned images and images saved
in "paint" programs. Bitmap images tend to have larger file size. And it is best not to rescale a
bitmap image as it effects the definition of the image. Can be used on Macintosh or Windows.
(See http://www.whatis.com/bitmap.htm for a slightly more technical definition.)
GIF -- Use the .gif file extension. Graphics Interchange Format. Use GIF file format for images
with only a few distinct colors, such as illustrations, cartoons, and images with blocks of color,
such as icons, buttons and horizontal rules. A popular file format for the Web. (See
http://www.whatis.com/gif.htm for a slightly more technical definition.)
JPEG -- Use the .jpg file extension. Joint Photographic Experts Group works well for Web
graphics. Use JPEG for scanned photographs and naturalistic artwork with highlights, shaded
areas, and shadows. The more complex and subtly rendered the image is, the more likely it is that
the image should be saved or converted to JPEG. DO NOT use JPEG for illustrations, cartoons,
lettering or any images that have very sharp edges. Sharp edges in images tend to blur in JPEG.
(See http://www.whatis.com/jpeg.htm for a slightly more technical definition.)
PICT -- Use the .pct file extension. The Picture file format is used primarily on the Macintosh
platform; it is the default format for Macintosh image files. PICT files are usually large. Use the
PICT format for images used in video editing, animation, desktop computer presentations and
multimedia authoring. Not used that much anymore.
TIFF--Use the .tif file extension. The Tag Interchange File Format is compatible with a variety
of software applications and can be used across platforms such as Macintosh, Windows and
UNIX. TIFF format is complex and the files are generally larger than GIF or JPEG. Cannot be
opened by a browser. There is no compression with TIFF and so this is the best format if you are
going to have your work printed professionally. TIFF files are commonly used in desktop
publishing, faxing, 3-D applications, and medical imaging applications. (QuarkXPress on Mac)
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