Sponsored by the National Association of Photoshop Professionals. Learn More
If you’re a designer, illustrator, or even a photographer you may find yourself in a creative rut at some point. Trust me this does happen. I always find it a good idea to go a spend an hour or two at the bookstore. It’s an amazing source for inspiration, especially the news stands. With hundreds of magazines on virtually every subject, there is always a spark of something creative in there. It’s really interesting to see what other designers are doing and it helps to keep up on current design trends, which is always a good idea. The key here is this: In order to produce something you need the ingredients. Fill your creative mind with the right ingredients and it will all come together.
No comments yet.
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI
This crumpled paper effect starts with designing a piece of notebook paper and then applying a displacement map
The steps for creating this pirate text effect start with converting a text layer into paths in order to reshape
In this tutorial, Corey creates an animated background using Adobe Photoshop CS3 Extended.
Corey recreates a video game logo by building a grid background and circular target using the define pattern
You’ve read some techniques in this chapter that require you to be in either RGB mode or Lab Color mode; however, if for any reason your image is already in CMYK mode, do not (I repeat, do not) convert to RGB or Lab mode for any reason. Once you’ve converted to CMYK mode, the data loss from the conversion has already occurred, and switching back to RGB mode won’t bring back those lost colors. What’s worse is, if you switch from CMYK to RGB (or Lab), when you convert back to CMYK mode, you’ll go through another CMYK conversion and damage your image even more. The moral of this story is-once you’re in CMYK mode, stay there.