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all tutorials found for the UFO Quilt Block Pick up here: www.patchworkposse.com/blog/2012/01/52-ufo-quilt-block-pi...
free pattern with tutorial plus free printable here: sewmamasew.com/2013/07/sewing-sayings-embroidery-pattern-...
These photos are from a tutorial on how to create Hime style curly teased piggy tails.
For more information please see:
Download this SolidWorks tutorial here:
Learn how to Model, Assemble and Render a Chopper in SolidWorks.
SolidWorks Tips, Tricks & Tutorials
Skils Matter - Progressive .NET Tutorials 2016, Wednesday, 22nd - Friday, 24th June at CodeNode, London. Images copyright www.edtelling.com. www.skillsmatter.com/conferences/7235-progressive-dot-net...
Pictures of my free Granny Square pattern tutorial, which can be found here:
sarahndipities.blogspot.com/2011/02/how-to-tuesday-granny...
Blogged the tutorial on how I've been folding fabric at my place and my mom's. Check it out on turningturning.com/.
For the description click the image below.
Lens used on the Pentax MX: SMC Pentax-M 28/2.8.
Lens used on the Pentax K100D: Sigma 50/2.8 EX DG macro.
Projection screen: a piece of tracing paper.
Per la descrizione cliccare l'immagine sotto.
Ottica usata sulla Pentax MX: SMC Pentax-M 28/2.8.
Ottica usata sulla Pentax K100D: Sigma 50/2.8 EX DG macro.
Schermo di proiezione: carta da lucido.
A sweet little Christmas top for Isla.
Liberty of London fabric, Bloomsbury Garden Collection, Virginia print.
T-Shirt from Target. Pom-Poms from Calico & Ivy.
Blogged here: rhapsodyandthread.blogspot.com.au/2013/11/t-shirt-tutoria...
Please join me on the blog today as I make up a simple, weighted blanket - commonly used for people with sensory disorders, those on the autism spectrum, and to help treat anxiety conditions.
This version is made in flannel and bound with a 1/4" double-fold binding. It weighs 4 pounds, with 6" channels, and measures approximately 39" by 51".
The first thing you need to do is determine the size of your computer desktop and resolution. A standard size is 1024 X 768 but what I'm showing here is 1680 X1050 (An Apple 20' monitor).
First, in PS, go File > New and in the Requester that pops up, make sure you change the dimension type to pixels. Enter the width and heigh values of your system, make the resolution 96 and the color mode at RGB. Make sure the "Background Contents" is set to transparent. If you want to set a color profile click on the advanced button. You can also give it a name in the top line.... say "My_Desktop." CLICK OK.,
1. You should now have a new Document with a transparent Layer 1. Click on the shape tool. Make sure "shape layer" is chosen in the top options bar (the would be the second icon from the left, or first that group of three. Next in the same option bar click on the styles menu and then the triangle in the upper right of that requestor and add "glass buttons" to your styles, appending them.
2. Click the new layer button on your Layers Pallet. Pick and choose the rectangle and drag and draw a rectangle picking one of the glass button styles. Choose two other shapes (don't forge the custom shape pallet). So you'll have four layers, three shape layers and one empty at the bottom.
3. Make sure your foreground color is white. Using fairly large type, making sure the top layer is chosen first, add something clever like "My Desktop." After that go Layer > Type > Convert to Shape. what you have should look like the top photo.
4. Next. On Each shape Layer warp or skew each shape. Do this by going commands (ctrl on PC) + t. If you right click (control click for you single button mouse guys) you should be able to choose several ways to "free transform". In CS2 "warp" is included and it's fun. But you should able to at least "skew."
5. Next rasterize each shape layer. then run a motion blur on each. The easy way is run it on one, then choose the next layer and choose Filter and motion blur should be right at the top.
6. Choose the gradient tool (underneath the paint bucket), double click on the gradient bar in the upper left and make a gradient using the colors from the styles you chose. You do this first by clicking under the gradient bar adding more gradient stops (look like little pencils). You double click on each stop and when you move the mouse over your creation you'll have a eye dropper to choose a color. See insert.
7. Drag your gradient across the bottom layer and if you want too take that into into Filter > Liquify and have fun.
8. Click on the top layer, which is your type, which should be white, and put it into "multiply" blending mode. Your type should disappear, although you might still see the outline, if the paths are still chosen in the paths pallet. Don't worry about that.
9. Go Layer > Layer Style > Blending Options and click on the checkboxes of Drop Shadow, Inner Glow and Bevel and Emboss and Contour under that. You can play with some settings on each one by choosing the name. You can get some neat effects. I didn't for this tutorial.
10 Lastly do Command (control on PC) + T, right click and choose Warp and Warp it. For those earlier than CS2, who probably don't have warp you can do something else. Since we made this a shape, each letter is a vector, so you can choose the Path Selection tool above the Pen Tool and warp each letter individually.
11. Merry Christmas and have fun.
A test to see the image degradation due to ISO increment.
Of course for a tutorial.
Look at original size the small violet bead on the left of the black cylinder, to appreciate the effect.
Lens: SMC Pentax-M 50mm F1.7 @ f:8
Light: full sun... and closed shutters.
Have fun trying the same with your own camera.
Un test per vedere come si degrada l'immagine con l'incremento degli ISO.
Naturalmente per un tutorial.
Per apprezzare l'effetto guardate in dimensione originale la perlina viola a sinistra del cilindro nero.
Ottica: SMC Pentax-M 50mm F1.7 a f:8
Luce: pieno sole... e persiane chiuse.
Divertitevi provando a fare lo stesso con la vostra macchina.
just an example picturese used in some explanation of my workflow in www.pentaxforums.com/forums/groups/135-astrophotography/5...
Finally getting to grips with joons-renderer. A new way to interact with Sunflow via Processing. It has an advantage over P5Sunflow, since it works with newer Processing versions as well.
The image is just a tweak of the tutorial for joons-renderer, a single box generated in Processing, then rendered inside a Sunflow Cornell Box.
Ricavare dal FIMO nero una sfera un po' schiacciata per il naso e due ovali piccoli piccoli per gli occhi.
free pattern with tutorial plus free printable here: sewmamasew.com/2013/07/sewing-sayings-embroidery-pattern-...
Download this SolidWorks tutorial here:
Learn how to Model, Assemble and Render a Chopper in SolidWorks.
SolidWorks Tips, Tricks & Tutorials
This is a little tutorial advocating the benfits of using the raw format. With raw format you can "develop" different versions of your "negative". The a part is a rather normal "copy" and the lightest part of Bathazars fur is overexposed, their are no details left in the fur, it's just maximum white (this is what your jpeg file would look like, if correctly exposed). The b part is "underdeveloped" and as you can see the raw file contains a lot of information in those parts that appears totaly overexposed in the a part.. The a+b part is a layer mix (normal blend), b ontop of a with trancparency set to about 35%.
And in reallity the b part is tonemapped in Photomatix, but that doesn't change the basic principle of how to get more from your pictures with the aid of raw files, you can do it with photoshop alone (or some similar program), the essential part is done in the raw editor.
The previous picture is the a+b combination.