Friday, December 25, 2009

How do i edit myspace pictures...with effects like this guy...?

disz guy hasz some crazy lookin pics and im lookin to find out how i can make my pics look like that? disz is his url look at his pics! www.myspace.com/blazenjerz21



How do i edit myspace pictures...with effects like this guy...?

I agree photoshop can do that , but its very expensive, But i know a FREE program that can help , you can get it here : http://downint.googlepages.com/photosoft...



How do i edit myspace pictures...with effects like this guy...?

PHOTO SHOP....YOU CAN DO SO MANY THINGS ON THERE WITH PHOTOS.....:



DO YOU HAVE A ADOBE PHOTO SHOP...OR A PHOTO PROGRAM ?



http://www.freedownloadhq.com/Photoshop1...



AND HERE EXPLAINS MORE.......http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshop/



AND PHOTO SHOP TIPS %26amp; TRICKS: http://www.graphic-design.com/Photoshop/



Although primarily designed to edit images for paper-based printing, Photoshop is used increasingly to produce images for the World Wide Web. Recent versions bundle a related application, Adobe ImageReady, to provide a more specialized set of tools for this purpose.



Photoshop also has strong ties with other Adobe software for media editing, animation and authoring. Files in Photoshop's native format, .PSD, can be exported to and from Adobe ImageReady, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Premiere, After Effects and Adobe Encore DVD to make professional standard DVDs, provide non-linear editing and special effects services such as backgrounds, textures and so on for television, film and the Web. For example, Photoshop CS broadly supports making menus and buttons for DVDs. For .PSD files exported as a menu or button, it only needs to have layers, nested in layer sets with a cueing format and Adobe Encore DVD reads them as buttons or menus.



Photoshop can deal with a number of different color models:



RGB color model



Lab color model



CMYK color model



Grayscale



Bitmap



Duotone



The most recent major version, released in 2005, is version 9. This iteration of the program is marketed as "Photoshop CS2." "CS" reflects its integration with "Adobe's Creative Suite" and a number "2" because it is the second version released since Adobe rebranded their products under the CS umbrella. Photoshop CS2 features important new additions such as multiple layer selecting and "warp," a curve-friendly version of the transform tool. For the digital photography enthusiasts, the "reduce grain" filter can help to improve pictures taken in low light. In an effort to break away from previous versions of the application and to reinforce its belonging with the new line of products, Photoshop even dropped one classic graphic feature from its packaging: the Photoshop eye icon, which was present in different manifestations from versions 3 to 7. Photoshop CS and CS2 now use feather icons as a form of identification.



Camera RAW 3.xThe latest version comes with Adobe Camera RAW, a plugin developed by Thomas Knoll which can read several RAW file formats from various digital cameras and import them directly into Photoshop. A preliminary version of the RAW plugin was also available for Photoshop 7.0.1 as a $99 USD optional purchase.



While Photoshop is the industry standard image editing program for professional raster graphics, its relatively high suggested retail price (US $600, approximately) has led to a number of competing graphics tools being made available at lower prices. To compete in this market, and to counter unusually high rates of piracy of their professional products, Adobe has introduced a Photoshop Elements, a version of Photoshop with many professional features removed, for under $100 US; this is aimed firmly at the general consumer market since the feature cuts make it less desirable for prepress work.



[edit] File formats



Photoshop has the ability to read and write many common raster and vector image formats such as .png, .gif, .jpeg, etc. It also has several native file formats:



The PSD (Photoshop Document) format stores an image as a set of layers, including text, masks, opacity, blend modes, color channels, alpha channels, clipping paths, and duotone settings. Photoshop's popularity means that the PSD format is widely used, and it is supported to some extent by most competing software.



The PSB format is a newer version of PSD designed for files over 2 GB.



The PDD format is a version of PSD that only supports the features found in the discontinued PhotoDeluxe software.



Industry impact



An example of deletion manipulation. The original is on the left.The development of digital image manipulation redefined the photographic post-production industry. It revolutionized the art of photo retouching and processing by streamlining workflows: intricate procedures which took hours or days, and could only be performed by skilled photographers, now became relatively easy even for amateur artists. Digital image manipulation has contributed greatly to the world of photography by enabling manipulations that were previously difficult or impossible, and by allowing non-destructive and easily reversible changes to images. As the market leader throughout this history, Photoshop was responsible for many of the innovations that are now commonplace.



During the digital photography revolution of the 1990s, Photoshop became even more entrenched as the industry standard. Many photographers used the software to migrate to all-digital workflows, greatly increasing the quality of the finished image. Photoshop was one of the first image processors that could prepare images for the World Wide Web,[citation needed] which effectively opened up the Internet as a new medium for graphic artists and photographers. It could be argued that Photoshop is primarily responsible for transforming the Web from its 1994 text-based roots into the graphical, interactive, user-friendly New Media Web of today



With the rise of graphics tablets, most notably from Wacom, programs such as Adobe Photoshop and Corel Painter have been used more and more to create original pieces of art. Using the pressure sensitive tablet can greatly improve the effects of the paint brush, eraser, or other tools. Tablets are used worldwide by professional comic book illustrators, architects, studio artists, etc. Even ILM, the special effects company that worked for the Star Wars films, used tablets combined with Photoshop in post-production.



The term photoshopping is a neologism, meaning "editing an image", regardless of the program used (compare with Google used as a verb). Adobe discourages use of the term [1] out of fear that it will undermine the company's trademark; an alternate term which leaves out the Photoshop reference is "photochop". The term photoshop is also used as a noun referring to the altered image. This is especially popular amongst members of the websites Something Awful, Worth1000, B3ta and Fark where photoshopping is an institution. The goal of altering an image, subtly or blatantly, is to make it humorous or clever, often via the use of obscure in-jokes and pop culture references. Another widespread practice is putting the face of a celebrity onto a nude or pornographic image. Photoshop competitions in all these varieties have become a favorite pastime for many professional and amateur users of the software.



The term is sometimes used with a derogatory intent by artists to refer to images that have been retouched instead of originally produced. A common issue amongst users of all skill levels is the ability to avoid in one's work what is referred to as "the Photoshop look" (although such an issue is intrinsic to many graphics programs).



Even more recent is the so-called "sport" of Photoshop Tennis. A match in this hobby consists of two Photoshop artists passing back and forth (usually via email) a Photoshop image file. Each player will make changes to the file and send it back. After a predetermined number of turns an independent judge will review the edits made and declare a winner. This allows artists to both showcase and hone their Photoshop skills.



In the vein of Photoshop Tennis, artists also engage in collaboration. This hobby consists of two Photoshop artists passing back and forth (usually via email) a Photoshop image file (.psd). Each artist adds elements to the composition, working with the other to create an image. There is not usually an element of competition involved with such an activity.



`/`/`/`/`/`/`/`/`/`/`/`/`/`/`/`/`/`/`/...



I HAVE DONE SOME OF THE SAME TYPES OF PHOTO CHANGES AND COLLAGES ON MINE....LOOK AT SOME OF MINE...IN MY YAHOO PHOTO ALBUMS.....ANGELWINGSROPTIONAL ON YAHOO 360.



How do i edit myspace pictures...with effects like this guy...?

yep photoshop

No comments:

Post a Comment

 
apply for a loan