View allAll Photos Tagged Tutorial
Today I have two tutorials for you guys - for a geometric pillowcase with a quotation and a tutorial for a small organiser (for makeup brushes, crochet hooks, pencils.. etc.).
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Wallpaper con texto 3D realizado con Cinema4d con reflexiones impresionantes. tutorial disponible www.youtube.com/watch?v=yBTiQGcOiPQ
cast-iron pan seasoning tutorial blogged lorigami.wordpress.com/2009/08/07/the-non-stick-pan-dilemma/
I made this from Heather's tutorial on DMD247.com, and I loved it so much that I made it my desktop wallpaper!! I forgot to tag it, so please don't claim as your own! What do you think?
This is a screenshot from a Cinema 4D animation done from Greyscale Gorrilla's (a href="http://greyscalegorilla.com/blog/2011/05/how-to-make-a-ribbon-wall-graphic-in-cinema-4d/">ribbon tutorial
How to work a Bias Bound Hem. Blogged here: www.thingsforboys.com/2014/02/sewing-101-bound-hem-tutori...
Colocar planos neutros de color(en este caso blanco).
Un foco de luz en uno de los ángulos superiores al plano donde se va a realizar la fotografía (en este caso a la izquierda).
I found some tutorial videos on youtube on how to marble paint your nails and I just had to try it. This was my first attempt ever!! I think it turned out pretty good. Though some of them chipped before I got to take pictures of them because I had to work and they chipped while threading/ starting a film, I work at a theater.
Ask me anything www.formspring.me/meganyourface
needle book tutorial here: imaginegnats.blogspot.com/2012/12/raccoon-felt-needle-boo... (includes link to download printable pdf)
see all of the #raccoonsfor2013 projects, tutorials, and patterns here: imaginegnats.blogspot.com/2012/12/raccoon-week-project-ro...
Using a ruler line up the corner of the marked 4 inch side with the 2nd 2 inch mark on the six inch side making sure it also hits the corner of the square. Draw a line from the corner of the square to the corner of the paper. Cut away as labeled in the photo.
This is a technique I often use when there is a lot of contrast in the photos, as in this one, taken in full sunshine. My aim is to lessen the contrast somewhat - to get more details out from the most dark and most light part of the photo, without loosing the overall zing and zest of the photo.
Number 1 is the original, developed in the RAW editor to my best ability.
Number 2 is another version from the RAW editor, made with the settings to give a photo with as little contrast as possible.
Number 3 is the tonemapped version of number 2. Tonemapping is a technique by wich the excess information contained in the 16 bit version of a file, is taken and applied onto the 8 bit version that are possible to show on a montor. I do my tonemapping in a program called Photomatix and depending on how you set it up the result varies a lot. If you compare number 2 and number 3, you can see that the later has less contrast and more details in, for example, the fur that's in the shadow.
Number 4 Is a composite of the original (number 1) and the tonemapped version of the low contrast copy (number 3). It is done in Photoshop and the soft light blend is applied.
Number 5 The finished picture is another composite, where I have put yet another copy of the low contrast tonemapped version (number 3) on top of the privious composite (number 4). The blend is set to normal but the opacity of the top layer is dialed down - on this picture to something around 30%.
To appreciate the details I can recommend the original size
Here, here and here are some other photos that I have treated in the same fashion or some variety thereof.
Tutorial is available in my shops. See my profile for links if you are interesting in tutorial. Happy beading!
This is adobe illustrator tutorial on how to make 100% vector fire using custom brush and gradient mesh background.
It work in all versions starting from illustrator 10.
Watch tutorial here:
Exifer tutorial part 1 of 7: Editing with Exifer.
Most digital cameras automatically add essentail EXIF information to the photo. When taking screenshots or camera phone pictures, though, there usually isn't much metadata. It isn't obvious how to add the data in Exifer, either. You need to right-click on the photo > EXIF/IPTC > Edit... Or you can click EXIF/IPTC > Edit... from the main menu; CTRL+E is the fastest. Exifer is handy for creating EXIF/IPTC templates, too; you can edit multiple photos at once pretty easily. (Don't ask me why some of the thumbnails don't show up in Exifer, either; one of its many minor bugs.) As I mentioned in the introduction, make sure your photo editing program doesn't erase your EXIF/IPTC data every time you use it.
Tip: You can right-click on images in Windows Explorer and Open With > Exifer.
Please make general comments on the main set page. Specific comments can be added to each picture, as well.
exifer1-editing