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Bueno... Pues lo prometido... Aquí llega!!
Espero que os guste y lo disfrutéis! Si no entendéis cualquier cosa, preguntad o si veis algún fallo en el texto, igual.
Saludos y gracias a las visitas y comentarios que me habéis dejado!!!!
Aquí os dejo el enlace:
Handmade polymer clay matrioskha´s buttons.
Very very small...
:)
Aquí os dejo este tutorial de los botones que realicé para el magazine "We Love Crafts" y que por ahora está publicado en su blog (http://welovecrafts.blogspot.com/)
[Muchas gracias, Anabel :) ]
¡Espero que os guste!
Just playing in Photoshop...
Tutorial available at: abduzeedo.com/super-easy-typographic-portrait-photoshop
Acabo de subir el primero de los vídeotutoriales que dedicaré a la fotografía panorámica.
Empiezo hablando de la importancia de contar con una base de nivelación (y os recomiendo alguna asequible y ligera), de la forma de enfocar de exponer.
En el siguiente creo que hablaré de la forma de conseguir evitar los problemas de paralaje cuando hay objetos cercanos, pero se admiten sugerencias, como siempre....
This is just a funny picture that I will discuss in BLOG in a few days. I'm planning a little tutorial about how to create very cool lighting effects in different ways with Photoshop CS6. Have fun :-)
Hi guys!
This is a sneak peek of a tutorial that will be soon published in a book. There will be more details coming soon! I really enjoyed working and exploring new techniques in this one!
Hope you guys like it and feel free to leave me a comment! Thanks!
UPDATE: This tutorial is part of the new Abduzeedo Book that was released a couple weeks ago, here's the link about the book. book.abduzeedo.com/
A few of my contacts expressed an interest in knowing what the difference between the original image and the post processed image with the Orton Effect were.
I'd love to see what my contacts can come up with for this!! If you try it out, send me some Flickr Mail and let me know!
My 31st Photo in Explore!! July 16th, 2008 Highest #55!!
Este es la composición original del concurso, vista en los tutoriales. A raiz de esta imagen como ejemplo, deberán crear su porpia isla flotante.
Another furniture guide was just posted on Brickbuilt!
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Para tod@s vosotr@ que compartís vuestros trabajos con tod@s, para quienes os pasais a visitarme y... bueno, para todo el mundo!!!!!
Aprovechar a poner esas bolitas que tenéis por ahí abandonadas. Con unas poquitas es suficiente.
Muakisssssssss!!!!!!
Nemanja Sekulic
www.youtube.com/watch?v=FUcJB2M6N44
The guy teaches Photoshop in the very best of ways.
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Some other albums of mine I hope you'll enjoy:
Bokeh
Twitter ID: erraticspace
Instagram (opens in same page!)
Instagram: My cat + friends
Instagram: Me - Non-cat stuff.
Four more designs explained in this guide on Brickbuilt!
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Dos flirck-colegas me han pedido por el procesado que he empleado para la serie de fotos de American Cars. Lo cierto es que el procesado es bien corto y sencillo, así que como no me cuesta demasiado, aquí lo dejo para quien pueda o quiera aprovecharlo.
Vamos por pasos ;)
My old tutorial. Modern Flowers Sculpture or Chess Tulips.
Finally I made this photos look more or less decent.
I used flowers like these in my polymer clay sculpture work two years ago or something.
Need a flying carpet for your minifigures to zip around the air on? The latest tutorial on Brickbuilt covers the design used in my Fabled Fortress of Al-Danah build. Check it out on Brickbuilt.
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Supplies:
-wool felt (1/2 yard)
-canvas (1/2 yard)
-fabric scraps
-ric-rac (8 inches)
-buttons (2)
-twill tape (1" wide, 26" length)
-thread
-fabric marker or tailor's chalk
Seam allowance is 1/2".
For the interested who did not see the first four pictures of this serie:
This is going to be my first visual tutorial about consciousness and awareness.
It is very easy because the pictures will speak for themselves.
Without words you will understand, what it all means.
Maybe you discover something very important for yourself... :-)))
If you like, ask yourself what you see and how you see.
Next picture tomorrow.
HKD
Ok so it's time, the Dome tutorial is here.
Andrew Whyte has given me the thumbs up to do a tutorial for the Dome, so I would like to thank him, firstly for inventing Domes, and secondly for letting me post this, because I've been waiting for him to post one before I did.
So here you go, all of you who have been asking and don't know, here is how to do Domes! - www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ZEZG7koMNY
Visto que os tecidos estampados está sendo uma febre neste verão, preparei um pap de flor inspirado nesta tendência.
LINK: 1drv.ms/w/s!AlP45q4jwLFhjFFTE_pQWB_0563K
I don't claim this article to be complete, and I may tweak it or extend it in the future. Most of the photos in it are made by fellow Flickr members, so I claim no ownership on them. You are free to share this tutorial in any way.
Péter
Nachdem heute Polymeramoi das Tutorial cane effilochée 1 veröffentlich hat, und meine Variante eine andere ist, kann ich mein Tutorial auch zur Verfügung stellen!
After today Polymeramoi has published her tutorial effilochée 1 , and my version is different, I can put my tutorial also available!
Another tutorial from my Element Experimentation series. This time cover some wavy plume built grass. You can find the tutorial here:
Hope you find it useful :)
Someone was asking me how I built my War Elephants, so I wrote a quick tutorial. :)
If you're going to BFVA you'll get to see these in person! :D
Thanks for viewing and have a great day!
Buenos días lluviosos a todas, hoy os traigo algo diferente y que sin ser idea mía sino de los chinos (de quién si no ) el tutorial si que lo he hecho yo ya que habéis sido varias las que me lo habéis pedido.
Lo vi en una revista de nudos china y de ahí he sacado el tuto del nudo, espero que lo entendáis bien
Si no podeis copiar la foto, en el blog creo que si que podeis.
Right. Here is a tutorial taking you through the steps of taking pictures for a panorama, through to turning it into a stereographic projection (little planet). Please feel free to link this in any forums where people are asking how to do this, its taken me quite a while to write this, so It would be good if it was appreciated =)
Step 1:
These are the photographs needed for an equirectangular panorama. They where all hand-held and shot in RAW format. (Download here, approx. 31MB) This is so that I can do a faux HDR of them later on in this tutorial.
Equipment:
I am using a Nikon D50 (1.5 crop factor on the sensor) and an 8mm Peleng lens. This has about 170º x 114º viewing angle, so can take a full 360º with a decent overlap, with about 5 shots.
Tips on Shooting:
To shoot a handheld panorama, I usually find the place I want to do it, take the nadir (pointing approx 45º down) by standing as far out of the shot as possible, shooting, then keeping the camera as still as possible, walk up to the camera and angle it up for the portrait shots. One perfectionist (Patrick as an example) way to take the nadir, is to shoot four shots, all pointing down then blended in photoshop to eliminate any shadow. Personally, I prefer to photoshop out the shadow afterwards, but that's not always possible.
To take the portrait shots, you always have to pivot as best you can around the Nodal Point of the camera. This is so that you do not get any parallax errors in your source photographs.
There are a couple of ways to do this. One way Pisco Bandito came up with is the string tripod technique. This is where you tie a piece of string, roughly round the middle of your lens, then tie a weight on the other end of the string. You then hold the string tought, and turn around that, making sure the string is always vertically upwards.
Another way Heiwa told me about is to have an 'anchor' on the floor, like a CD case, and pivot the camera around, making sure the CD case is in the same amount with each shot. Personally, I find this works well with finding a significant spot on the ground as well.
Other than that, you can just practice doing it without either of these things, and usually its not much of a problem when the objects your photographing are far away anyway.
Using a Longer Lens (non-fisheye)
When using a longer lens (my experience is with an 18mm lens), you have to do 'multi-row' panoramas. This is where instead of shooting just the one row and a nadir and zenith, you shoot many rows of shots to get it all in. As I have only ever done one panorama like this, I would much appriciate someone who uses a non-fisheye lens to add some more to this tutorial. In the mean time, have a look here
Proceed to Step 2
Hi Bee's
Outra semaninha começando, daqui a poco já chega o final do ano do toelho D: como tudo passou rápido!
No Fofurice Rules tem a Nail Art que apareceu no vídeo de hidratação :D
É essa ai toda fofurice, super tendência!
Pra conferir o post é só clicar: FOFURICE RULES ♥
Ou ir direto ao vídeo:TUTORIAL ♥
O próximo tutorial é MUITO FOFOOO! Aposto que vocês vão se derreter, é outra tendência *-*
Mas fica pra quarta oks?
Qualquer dúvida só falar,
XOXO ♥
_______________________________________________________________________________
@deborawernke (\_(\
An Eclipse build that ended up looking like Civic EJ1/EG6
Tutorial - www.youtube.com/watch?v=wzQc0qQ6lz8&t=1s
Thanks for viewing!
My Instagram - www.instagram.com/kmpmocs
Facebook - www.facebook.com/kmpmocs
I use Adobe Photoshop CS4 but most all versions of Photoshop should have all these features. I am making the assumption that you already have a good understanding of how Photoshop works and how to set up layers and such. If not, there are plenty of tutorials on that elsewhere.
I'm not claiming that this is the best way to do this. This is just the way I do it. There are a ton of different ways to get the same results in Photoshop.
Tomorrow's Tutorial: Editing (Adding Effects)
FULL-SIZE VERSION: farm8.staticflickr.com/7007/6739429369_271671b3e3_o.png
Some friends were discussing their frustration with the floppy Obitsu body used by JerryBerry dolls, so I tried a method recommended by Obitsu and Pullip fans to fix the problem. Hopefully this tutorial will help JerryBerry fans everywhere overcome the body flop!
Doesn't look like we'll stop making furniture tutorials any time soon, and here's another that covers 4 new techniques.
Read it over on Brickbuilt.
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1.This is an easy trick for making a contour I guess it`s nothing new.The result of it more look like a sketch.Or painted by the brush of the painter :-) To show it I`ll make a spiral element-leaf of the first picture.It`s easy to make straight line but spiral shows us more options for rounded lines.
2.We`ll use two colors of polymer clay-green and blue.
3.With help of a small blade we cut this shape not very deep.
4.From the green clay make a thin "cord".
5.Than we use thicker knife to expand the slot.
6.Carefully put the green "cord"in the "groove" and this way full all the shape.Put and press.
7.When it`s done rolled with the roller.The green clay must go deeper in the blue basic.
8.After it we use blade and cut lengthwise and shallow.Like a mokume gane.
9.Here is our contour.The surface can be smoothed with nylon.I use this contour with "painted" with mokume gane.
www.flickr.com/photos/vokade/6992248166/in/photostream
Another work with contour.
www.flickr.com/photos/vokade/8405738210/in/photostream
Have a nice time with clay! :-)
Here's the easiest way (for me) to explain how I do that halftone effect thing. If this isn't clear, post questions in the comments.
Mais um tutorial que eu achei na net e traduzi.
Projeto original do site www.dragoknit.blogspot.com
Translated tutorial from www.dragoknit.blogspot.com
Wahh I finally finished these few parts. Sorry for the long wait. i will continue to update the parts probably this weekend! ; - ; I hope you will like the tutorial > < <3
View it in original size!
See the tutorial on my Youtube channel here: KosBrick
This is one of my early build when I started playing LEGO in mid 2013, it was inspired by Jon San Pedro Hulkbuster version on Lego Ideas. His build was the one that inspires me to start building by myself, which before that I only collecting official sets.
Since I kept this build for nostalgic reason, I always upgraded and updated here and there over time and here is my latest version of this build :)
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Poke me at:
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Inspired by:
Our fifth tutorial of the year covers this useful water technique. Read it now on Brickbuilt.
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