Michael Freeman’s The Photographer’s Eye is a beautiful book that I find myself going back to and thinking about much more than other photo books. As someone with no training in art or graphic design, I find this book immensely valuable in helping me think more explicitly and clearly about the art of composing photographs.
Here’s a promotional video that gives some sense of Michael’s approach
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B11r9v6EeYY
Here are some photo galleries on Michael’s web page
http://www.michaelfreemanphoto.com/
Friday, December 24, 2010
Online Photoshop tutorials and digital imaging discussions
I’ve found the following online tutorials enormously useful in learning some of the basics of Photoshop, as well as some more sophisticated techniques:
Adobe TV Learn Photoshop CS5 covers many of the basics
http://tv.adobe.com/show/learn-photoshop-cs5/
Julieanne Kost’s Blog has tons of tips and tricks relating to Photoshop and Lightroom
http://blogs.adobe.com/jkost/
Mark Johnson has an extensive series of free video tutorials on his Photoshop Workbench
http://www.msjphotography.com/index.php/category/photoshop-workbench/
Glenn Mitchell of The Light’s Right has lots of excellent in-depth tutorials available as free PDF downloads, including this superb overview of digital dodging (selective lightening) and burning (selective darkening) techniques:
http://www.thelightsright.com/GetYourDodgingAndBurningUnderControlPDF
Tony Kuyper also has a series of excellent tutorials on more sophisticated Photoshop techniques such as luminance masking (which allows highly selective dodging and burning of particular tonal ranges within an image)
http://goodlight.us/writing/tutorials.html
I have appreciate the accumulated wisdom and experience available in the searchable discussion archive of the Photoshop Users Support Group an Flickr:
http://www.flickr.com/groups/photoshopsupport/discuss/
as well as the Digital Photography Review forum on software and retouching
http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/forum.asp?forum=1006
and PhotoNet’s forum on digital darkroom issues
http://photo.net/digital-darkroom-forum/
Adobe TV Learn Photoshop CS5 covers many of the basics
http://tv.adobe.com/show/learn-photoshop-cs5/
Julieanne Kost’s Blog has tons of tips and tricks relating to Photoshop and Lightroom
http://blogs.adobe.com/jkost/
Mark Johnson has an extensive series of free video tutorials on his Photoshop Workbench
http://www.msjphotography.com/index.php/category/photoshop-workbench/
Glenn Mitchell of The Light’s Right has lots of excellent in-depth tutorials available as free PDF downloads, including this superb overview of digital dodging (selective lightening) and burning (selective darkening) techniques:
http://www.thelightsright.com/GetYourDodgingAndBurningUnderControlPDF
Tony Kuyper also has a series of excellent tutorials on more sophisticated Photoshop techniques such as luminance masking (which allows highly selective dodging and burning of particular tonal ranges within an image)
http://goodlight.us/writing/tutorials.html
I have appreciate the accumulated wisdom and experience available in the searchable discussion archive of the Photoshop Users Support Group an Flickr:
http://www.flickr.com/groups/photoshopsupport/discuss/
as well as the Digital Photography Review forum on software and retouching
http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/forum.asp?forum=1006
and PhotoNet’s forum on digital darkroom issues
http://photo.net/digital-darkroom-forum/
Best Digital Imaging Book ever
Photoshop has a steep learning curve that can seem daunting, which is why there are lots of instructional materials available. It’s slightly dated now, and won’t include references to some of the features and functions in the newest versions of Photoshop, but the most enduringly useful digital imaging book I’ve read is The Creative Digital Darkroom by Katrin Eismann and Sean Duggan. If you want to learn how to use some of the most powerful core features that Photoshop has to offer, in ways that are most relevant to photographers (rather than graphic artists), this is the book.
http://www.creativedigitaldarkroom.com/
I find myself going back to this book much more often than the offerings by Martin Evening or Scott Kelby (fine as those books may be).
http://www.creativedigitaldarkroom.com/
I find myself going back to this book much more often than the offerings by Martin Evening or Scott Kelby (fine as those books may be).
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