Logo Background RSS

» mask

  • Photoshop Tutorial 10 - Adjustment Layers: Reasons to...
    By GFXer on August 27th, 2008 | 3 Comments3 Comments Comments
    With adjustment layers the glass is always half full. You’d be crazy not to use them. Especially when you consider that they add almost no weight to the file size. Each adjustment layer is a simple instruction to move a slider, adjust a curve, or change a histogram. Because the adjustments are stored on their own layers, you have total fl...
  • Phoshop Tutorial 9 - Masking Tips
    By GFXer on August 27th, 2008 | No Comments Comments
    Here are some tips that are equally applicable whatever kind of mask you are working on: a Quick Mask, alpha channel, or a layer mask Ask yourself why. Be sure to ask yourself what you are making that mask for. Depending on your intent, it may not even be necessary to make a mask. Can you select the areas of the image you want by color, by to...
  • Photoshop Tutorial 8 - Combining Textures
    By GFXer on August 27th, 2008 | No Comments Comments
    In this next example we’ll see how painting in shades of gray allows you to introduce transparency effects: Darker grays conceal more, lighter grays reveal more of the layer. Or put another way, the closer you move towards black, the greater the masking effect; the closer you move towards white, the more the revealing effect. 1. O...
  • Photoshop Tutorial 7 - Layer Mask Essentials
    By GFXer on July 24th, 2008 | No Comments Comments
    Let’s take a look at layer mask conventions and terminology, beginning with a couple of housekeeping points: The Background layerthat layer that most Photoshop images start out withdoesn’t support transparency and thus can’t support layer masks. It sounds worse than it is: to add a layer mask to a Background layer, take the ...
  • Photoshop Tutorial 6 - Nondestructive Editing with Sm...
    By GFXer on July 24th, 2008 | No Comments Comments
    Smart Objects are the latest development in the evolution of Photoshop layers. Working with pixel-based media, we are inhibited by the rules of resolution. Photoshop allows us to stretch and scale our images as if they were Silly Putty, but if we take too many liberties, we irrevocably damage our images. Not anymore. Smart Objects let us scale...
  • Photoshop Tutorial 5 - Experimenting with Multiple Co...
    By GFXer on July 10th, 2008 | No Comments Comments
    Layer Comps is a great productivity tool. A snapshot of the state of your Layers palette, a layer comp lets you experiment with multiple versions of a layout in a single document, saving time and disk space, but most importantly freeing you from worrying about what layer went with what on which version, and what its exact opacity and blending ...

Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape