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That’s right. Scott Kelby will be back on the road next month as he brings his Photoshop CS3 Power Tour to Hartford, CT on May 13. This will be a full day of nothing but Photoshop goodness. Packaged in Scott’s famous teaching style, you will be entertained every bit as much as you learn the coolest effects and time-saving techniques anywhere. All this for the low price of $99 ($79 for NAPP members). So if you are in or around the Hartford area, you don’t want to miss the chance to learn from the best out there. Find out more about this and other seminar dates here.
Also, there is a new course from Joe McNally on the Kelby Online Training site. This one is called Using Small Flashes. Joe gets into utilizing small, hot shoe flashes in very creative ways. Don’t settle for just having the flash on the camera, break out and follow Joe as he shares innovative ways of getting the most from your flash systems. It is indeed a treat to be able to learn from one of the very best photographers working today. So don’t miss out. Find out more about this course and others here.
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Corey jazzed up this photo by making a custom brush and applying an outer glow layer style to create the repeating patterns
Using a mixture of filters and blending modes, Corey takes a stock photo and transforms it into an old, classic 1950’s pin-up poster.
Instead of using a displacement map, here’s another method for taking a custom file and distorting it to match a background image.
Corey stumbled upon this effect while experimenting with the smudge tool and its finger painting feature. Start off by
Problem: You added more RAM to your system and assigned more RAM to Photoshop, but it doesn’t seem to run any faster. Reason: Adding RAM doesn’t always make Photoshop run faster. It only works if you didn’t have enough RAM to begin with. Adding RAM will only help to make your computer run as fast as it can, but it won’t make your 800-MHz computer run at 801 MHz. For example, if you work on Web images and the average image you work on is 3 MB, you only need about 15 or 20 MB assigned to Photoshop to have it run at full speed. If you’ve got that, and add another 256 MB of RAM, Photoshop won’t run any faster, because Photoshop only needs that 15 or 20 MB that you already had. Freaky. To check your RAM usage, go under the Photoshop menu, under Preferences, and choose Memory & Image Cache (on a Windows PC, Preferences are under the Edit menu).
Sid Pratt said on — May 4, 2008 @ 9:51 am
Really enjoyed Bert in Boston last week so this will be a go.