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><channel><title>An American Peyote Scribble &#187; Photoshop</title> <atom:link href="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/category/photography/photoshop/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /><link>http://blog.americanpeyote.com</link> <description>American photographer, writer, thinker near Zurich Winterthur Switzerland</description> <lastBuildDate>Thu, 29 Jul 2010 12:59:44 +0000</lastBuildDate> <language>en</language> <sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod> <sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency> <generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0</generator> <item><title>Sessions with Joey L &#8211; DVD Tutorial Review</title><link>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2009/10/21/sessions-with-joey-l-dvd-tutorial-review/</link> <comments>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2009/10/21/sessions-with-joey-l-dvd-tutorial-review/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Wed, 21 Oct 2009 13:15:20 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Mark</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Learning]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Photography]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Photoshop]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Joey L]]></category> <category><![CDATA[review]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Sessions]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Tutorial]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://blog.americanpeyote.com/?p=1400</guid> <description><![CDATA[This is a review of the Sessions with Joey L DVD Tutorial, including a break-down of the DVD content and how I feel it applies to my photographic directions and how it might be useful to other people. Back in the fall of 2007 I was spending my days in a Tokyo dorm room playing [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><p
style="text-align: justify;"><em>This is a review of the <a
href="http://www.joeyl.com/sessionswithjoeyl/" target="_blank">Sessions with Joey <span
class="caps">L DVD </span>Tutorial</a>, including a break-down of the <span
class="caps">DVD</span> content and how I feel it applies to my photographic directions and how it might be useful to other people.</em></p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;">Back in the fall of 2007 I was spending my days in a Tokyo dorm room playing around with Photoshop, and decided it was time to pick up some sort of tutorial <span
class="caps">DVD</span>.&#160; Yes, you can learn and be inspired without needing to buy these things, but I break my brain trying to figure out stuff like applying Altair Optistruct optimization strategies to fatigued composite structures with barley a manual to work with.&#160; So with Photoshop I was looking for a way to relax and get a grounding in photo processing, so I bought the JoeyL Photoshop Tutorial <span
class="caps">DVD</span> by photographer Joey Lawrence.&#160; It was well received by some, ridiculed by others, and I found it to be a good buy.&#160; However, I&#8217;m able to pull a great deal of knowledge from anything, due to my training in figuring out ball-busting simulation programs like Nastran.&#160; However, for my purposes, what was lacking from the Photoshop Tutorial <span
class="caps">DVD</span> was the connection between lighting and shot setup and Photoshop processing.&#160; So when Mr. Lawrence released his Sessions with JoeyL <span
class="caps">DVD</span>, I watched the trailer, and then decided to drop 200 <span
class="caps">USD</span> on the <span
class="caps">DVD</span>.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><strong>First some background on me</strong></p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;">Here&#8217;s my situation.&#160; I&#8217;ve mainly focused on learning photography and lighting during the last two years.&#160; This was mainly in my spare time while finishing my Doctor of Science degree at <span
class="caps">ETH </span>Zurich&#160; I read Strobist in between experiments, and sometimes sketched out lighting diagrams at the <span
class="caps">SPIE </span>Smart Materials conferences.&#160; Since starting a normal job I&#8217;ve had time to develop a lighting and processing look that I like, which fits with what I see in my head.&#160; To this end I finished with taking only self-portraits and started organizing model shoots.&#160; The last piece is nearly in place and that is making a strong link between vision and reality.&#160; Taking the image in my head and easily making it a tangible medium people can hold in their hands or see for themselves.&#160; I sketch out shoot ideas, design lighting concepts, network, and do my own Photoshop.&#160; Foe me it&#8217;s all part of the process of Arience, the integration of Art and Science in my life.&#160; In my view, everyone is a poet and an engineer.&#160; I attended a Strobist seminar and picked up the Sessions <span
class="caps">DVD</span> to get a better perspective on how other photographers work, see the process of concept to photo in other people.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><strong>The Sessions content is broken down as follows</strong></p><br
/><p
style="text-align: left;"><strong>Lighting Theory</strong></p></p><p><ul><em>The Vision</em></ul></p><p><ul><em>Lighting Theory &#8211; The Basics</em></ul></p><p><ul><em>Lighting Theory &#8211; Advanced Technique</em></ul></p><p><ul><em>The Necessary Tools</em></ul></p><p><ul><em>Modifiers</em></ul></p><p><p
style="text-align: left;"><strong>Photoshoots</strong></p></p><p><ul></p><p><div
style="text-align: left;"><em>Forbes Assignment</em></div></ul></p><p><ul></p><p><div
style="text-align: left;"><em>Monty Are <span
class="caps">I CD </span>Artwork</em></div></ul></p><p><ul></p><p><div
style="text-align: left;"><em>Thrillogy Advertisement Shoot</em></div></ul></p><p><ul></p><p><div
style="text-align: left;"><em>Model Test Shoot</em></div></ul></p><p><ul></p><p><div
style="text-align: left;"><em>Strange Familiar</em></div></ul></p><p><p
style="text-align: left;"><strong>Business</strong></p></p><p><ul></p><p><div
style="text-align: left;"><em>Business Lecture</em></div></ul></p><p><ul></p><p><div
style="text-align: left;"><em>Trust</em></div></ul></p><p><ul></p><p><div
style="text-align: left;"><em>Misc Q&#038;A</em></div></ul></p><p><p
style="text-align: left;"><strong>Travel</strong></p></p><p><ul></p><p><div
style="text-align: left;"><em>Travel Lecture</em></div></ul></p><p><ul></p><p><div
style="text-align: left;"><em>Ethiopia: Behind the Scenes</em></div></ul></p><p><p
style="text-align: left;"><strong>Photoshop</strong></p></p><p><ul></p><p><div
style="text-align: left;"><em>Compositing</em></div></ul></p><p><ul></p><p><div
style="text-align: left;"><em>Using Color Curves</em></div></ul></p><p><ul></p><p><div
style="text-align: left;"><em>Strange Familiar &#8211; Swapping Skies</em></div></ul></p><p><ul></p><p><div
style="text-align: left;"><em>Experimenting with Blending Modes</em></div></ul></p><p><ul></p><p><div
style="text-align: left;"><em>Black and White Conversion</em></div></ul></p><p><ul></p><p><div
style="text-align: left;"><em>Tonal Colorizing</em></div></ul></p><p><ul></p><p><div
style="text-align: left;"><em>Fixing Blown Highlights</em></div></ul></p><p><p
style="text-align: justify;">There&#8217;s something that always floats around in my head, namely that photography isn&#8217;t difficult, and it gets easier every year.&#160; Images which took a full production studio to create 20 years ago can now be done in a bedroom quicker and with fewer resources.&#160; The thing that interests me is the process and approach a person takes to the whole idea of photography from concept to lighting to final image, and I think this has been well communicated in the Sessions <span
class="caps">DVD</span>.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Lighting Theory: </strong>Joey explains his philosophy and how he sets up lighting.&#160; Then he moves on to modifiers and how the ones he uses to define the character of his images.&#160; If you know nothing of lights and modifiers this is a great video, if you know everything already you probably won&#8217;t buy this <span
class="caps">DVD</span> anyways.&#160; I fall in the middle, and found this to be a very interesting section.&#160; It didn&#8217;t totally revolutionize my ideas on lighting, but did make me think a bit more outside of the Strobist softbox.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Photoshoots:</strong> Joey presents a walk-through, behind-the-scenes videos of different shoots including bands, a plastic surgeon, and a model test shoot.&#160; Throughout Joey gives explanations of lighting and concept, and you can draw a direct link between how he works and his previously described Lighting Vision.&#160; Also interesting here is seeing the photographer-model interaction.&#160; This is an important, I think the most important part of a shoot.&#160; I try to make an emotional connection with models and explain what I&#8217;m trying to create in a shoot, and it&#8217;s interesting to see the way Joey works in these different situations, working with a <span
class="caps">TFP</span> model versus a highly successful surgeon versus a band releasing a new CD.&#160; All in all, very cool to see.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Business:</strong> Joey describes how he grew and developed as a photographer, the value of a portfolio, how he gets jobs, basically a discussion on how he works as a businessman.&#160; Again, this is great to see, and would be interesting for anyone contemplating a business (even outside photography), because he focuses on the personal drive and interaction which are needed, as opposed to just having a slick portfolio online somewhere.&#160; He also has a video on Trust and how important it is for business as well as directing shoots, again, very cool stuff to hear about.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Travel: </strong>Focus is&#160;on Ethiopia, and a lot about how he understands the culture of his subjects before blasting them with a Profoto strobe.&#160; You don&#8217;t need to be planning a trip to Africa to get a lot out of these videos, they focus on the human connection between photographer and subject, a topic often missed and usually never even brought up in internet forum discussions (well, the ones I read at least).&#160; The Travel section is great for looking at the human side of photography, and focusing less on the technical side.&#160; It&#8217;s also a great motivational video if you&#8217;re the type who always thinks of traveling but hasn&#8217;t jumped on the plane yet.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Photoshop:</strong> Here are presented a few popular techniques, many things people are always asking about on the internet.&#160; Yes, you can also find internet videos on the basic techniques, but it&#8217;s the application of those techniques in the larger puzzle which is of value here.&#160; If you want to buy the <span
class="caps">DVD</span> just for Photoshop, you&#8217;re better off looking at something else (I recommend Skin Photoshop the book).&#160; The Photoshop section fits in very well with the rest of the <span
class="caps">DVD</span>, bringing the vision full circle to the post processing stage.&#160; This was something I found lacking in his Photoshop <span
class="caps">DVD </span>Tutorial, because there a strong connection wasn&#8217;t made between lighting and post-processing.&#160; Here however, you can see how the images from the Strange Familiar shoot are processed, including a new sky, and in this way you get a feeling for the whole process from start to finish.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Why I Liked It</strong></p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;">What I like is seeing concept development in other people, and seeing how they think and work.&#160; I like understanding their philosophy of creation and ideas or their approach to concept development and how it&#8217;s realized in a final form &#8211; be it a picture or an elegant toaster.&#160; In this way, I think the Sessions <span
class="caps">DVD</span> is fantastic, and I recommend it instead of taking a workshop (if you have to choose).&#160; Sessions gives you a feeling for the whole process from lighting philosophy, through shoot execution, the business approach to final Photoshop editing, and throughout out you get a feeling for the human connection as a main driver of the process.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Is it worth the Money?</strong></p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;">Is $200, $250, $300 too much for a photography <span
class="caps">DVD</span>?&#160; Maybe yes, possibly no.&#160; I paid $200 for my copy, and I&#8217;m ok with that. The Zach Arias <span
class="caps">DVD</span> is $250, the Strobist $135, and new ones come out all the time from places like Lighting-Essentials, Scott Kelby (how many remixed Photoshop books can we release this year?) and David&#160;Honl (to name a very few).&#160; But not all are coming from a working commercial photographer who shoots stuff I find interesting.&#160;This isn&#8217;t the same as a working educator who also takes nice photos.&#160; There is a significant difference here.&#160; It&#8217;s easy to say, &#8220;you need to do this, this and this&#8221; to make cool pictures, it&#8217;s another thing to be a working photographer at this level and showing the whole process.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;">I consider it the difference between learning Physics from a tenured professor who hasn&#8217;t written a new publication in 2 years versus a&#160;Richard Feynman (even after he was at the top of his field, you can find some of his lectures on the net).&#160; Maybe this sounds harsh, but my main critique of 90% of the photography/Photoshop learning material I see&#160;for free from internet sources as well as some&#160;professional educators is the lack of vision, and for me that makes all the difference.&#160; The Sessions <span
class="caps">DVD</span> is a tutorial with Vision and Heart.&#160; But maybe that&#8217;s just me?&#160; I got so bored with McNally&#8217;s Hot Shoe Diaries I didn&#8217;t get half-way through it, but I love re-reading Michael Grecco&#8217;s <em>Dramatic Portrait</em>.&#160; It&#8217;s just what gets me off.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;">I&#8217;ve also reviewed and still like the <a
href="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2007/10/17/joeyl-tutorial-review-behind-the-scenes/">JoeyL Behind the Scenes Photoshop <span
class="caps">DVD</span></a>, the reason being that the focus isn&#8217;t placed on minute details of levels and curve operations, but because it focuses on process and development.&#160; This is the same philosophy I use in engineering research, so maybe that&#8217;s why I like it.&#160; The details can always be ironed out, but if you don&#8217;t have that overall big picture (that thing you&#8217;re reaching for) in your head, then you won&#8217;t have a clue about which details need to be fine-tuned.&#160; This is one thing I wasn&#8217;t getting from reading Strobist or attending a seminar &#8211; but I just learn differently than other people, and so do you.&#160; I don&#8217;t need someone to <em>make</em> me creative, I do that on my own, sometimes vie <a
href="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2009/10/14/the-scream-inspiration-via-acute-boredom/">induced boredom</a>.&#160; It&#8217;s just cool to see how other people are creative in the scope of their vision.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Brass Tacs</strong></p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;">The Sessions <span
class="caps">DVD</span> isn&#8217;t some blue pill to take with a whiskey chaser, promising you everlasting creative abilities as well as the drive to bring your vision into the world.&#160; It&#8217;s just another piece in the puzzle. Seek your knowledge in the way you know will be most effective for your own personal learning style.&#160; I get Photoshop technique inspiration by <a
href="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/category/creativity/artcast/">actually painting</a>, I get lighting inspiration when I&#8217;m listening to a <a
href="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/category/barcamps/web-monday-zurich/">Web Monday</a> talk or a&#160;smart materials presentation.&#160; No two people learn the same way, so find out what works for you and exploit it to make your own visions a reality.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: center;">&#160;<em><p><a
href="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2009/10/21/sessions-with-joey-l-dvd-tutorial-review/"><em>Click here to view the embedded video.</em></a></p></em></p></p> ]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2009/10/21/sessions-with-joey-l-dvd-tutorial-review/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>2</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>Photoshop in My Analog Days</title><link>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2009/10/06/photoshop-in-my-analog-days/</link> <comments>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2009/10/06/photoshop-in-my-analog-days/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Tue, 06 Oct 2009 17:11:38 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Mark</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Photoshop]]></category> <category><![CDATA[drawing]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Phototshop]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://blog.americanpeyote.com/?p=1347</guid> <description><![CDATA[Photoshop is one of the coolest, most influential programs I&#8217;ve used in my computer life. Before I had a digital camera I had a Mac Cube, that beautifully designed simplistic computer which has never been equaled for elegance and class. It was a good time, I put contact paper on my walls and wrote on [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><p
style="text-align: justify;"><img
class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-1343" title="perspective-1.jpg" src="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/wp-content/uploads/perspective-1-230x300.jpg" alt="perspective-1.jpg" width="230" height="300" />Photoshop is one of the coolest, most influential programs I&#8217;ve used in my computer life.  Before I had a digital camera I had a Mac Cube, that beautifully designed simplistic computer which has never been equaled for elegance and class. It was a good time, I put contact paper on my walls and wrote on them whenever an idea took hold. Poetry, philosophy, thoughts on existence, everything that came into my head. The problem with drawing on static walls is that the ideas and pictures become locked in a certain place, a specific arrangement. Photoshop freed me from that. As soon as I got Photoshop I knew it would be pointless to use it with a mouse and picked up a Wacom Graphire tablet for $80 or something. From there I started experimenting with combining sketches and doing the color digitally.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;">In retrospect, it&#8217;s obvious that my background in Photoshop learning started in my Math, History, English, and Chemical Engineering classes. I wouldn&#8217;t say I was totally bored in school, but y=mx+b doesn&#8217;t need to fill the entire brain, and the vast expanse not consumed by redundant analysis of the Scarlet Letter were used to draw various things in my class notes. The problem is that you then have to run through old homework assignments on colloids to find that cool sketch of a screaming head, and much like <a
href="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2007/08/29/ulysses-awesome-writing-program-review/">Ulysses</a> for writing, Photoshop has been great for giving life to random class sketches.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;">With Photoshop, a scanner, and a Wacom tablet, I knew I had it made. My first real attempt at creating something was a composite of hand-drawn sketches scanned with a Microtek machine and manipulated on screen.  I included a portrait, taken during a biomedical engineering student meeting at Michigan State University (MSU).  Somehow I guess it was the precursor to the current self-portraits on Flickr and my website.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><img
class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1345" title="geu_gnome-1.jpg" src="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/wp-content/uploads/geu_gnome-1-249x300.jpg" alt="geu_gnome-1.jpg" width="200" />I called this first thing &#8220;Perspective&#8221; I guess because, well, I have no idea. I was introduced to Pink Floyd: The Wall during this time, so it made sense to include a brick type structure, which was being demolished by small worker guys with devil legs and no hair on their heads. I also like the look of Marvel and Magneto from the X-men, so I added something with muscles and a cool Spartan helmet. It started as a few separate hand sketches which were digitized, and then colored in Photoshop.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Here was the workflow:</strong></p></p><p><p
style="text-align: justify;">Draw random stuff<br
/> Scan sketches with flatbed scanner<br
/> Open in Photoshop<br
/> Cut up the sketches, just taking the ones I like<br
/> Assemble sketches so they sort of fit together<br
/> Ink over with a Photoshop brush<br
/> Expand and draw other strange images<br
/> Add color on separate layers for everything<br
/> Save and forget about for 8 years<br
/></p><p
style="text-align: justify;"><img
class="alignright size-medium wp-image-1346" title="dog-1.jpg" src="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/wp-content/uploads/dog-1-300x270.jpg" alt="dog-1.jpg" width="250" />It&#8217;s been cool to look at what I do now with a sweet camera like the <a
href="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2009/07/08/sony-a900-first-impressions/">Sony <span
class="caps">A900</span></a> and what you can do today with Photoshop, and compare it to what I was doing nearly a decade ago in my apartment. What I edit photos today, it&#8217;s always with a Wacom tablet, adding to the shadows, manipulating the density of darkness on arms and cheek bones, using the exact same drawing techniques developed in Geometry class when I thought of how cool it would be to draw an issue of the Punisher. Photoshop is a sweet program, but like Altair Hypermesh, it hasn&#8217;t changed much in the past 10 years. There have been some essential changes, but the core philosophy has stayed the same.  If you have a cool idea and some drive, you can create some tripped out stuff.  It&#8217;s just the drive to create which is important and will propell you forward, not matter if you&#8217;re working on Smart Materials, a photo shoot, or a sketch during a chemical engineering class.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><img
class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-370" title="r0011876.jpg" src="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/wp-content/uploads/r0011876.jpg" alt="r0011876.jpg" width="400" height="300" /></p></p> ]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2009/10/06/photoshop-in-my-analog-days/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>0</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>Random Photoshop Tutorial &#8211; Grunge Textures</title><link>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2008/12/07/random-photoshop-tutorial-grunge-textures/</link> <comments>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2008/12/07/random-photoshop-tutorial-grunge-textures/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Sun, 07 Dec 2008 20:59:45 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Mark</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Photoshop]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Video]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Grunge]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Texture]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Tutorial]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://blog.americanpeyote.com/?p=682</guid> <description><![CDATA[I don't know why I like the feeling of grunge textures. Maybe it's because I'm trying to re-create the feeling I get walking through Berlin or Detroit, maybe it's because I'm a cliche and am just following the crowd. Joey Lawrence uses grunge texturing techniques, and I bought the Joey L Photoshop DVD Tutorial, so obviously I'm just copying his style. Maybe, but some people say that everything is just a copy of a copy of a copy. I know this because Tyler knows this and because Fight Club is one of my favorite books/movies. What I do know is that sometimes I take a photo and it's perfectly exposed and has great shadows and yet it just doesn't have the look, the texture that I want the image to have, so I have to go about adding such elements in Photoshop.]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a
href="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/wp-content/uploads/sad_clown_texture.jpg"><img
class="size-medium wp-image-683" title="Sad Clown Texture" src="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/wp-content/uploads/sad_clown_texture-300x225.jpg" alt="A Textured Sad Clown" width="250" align="left" /></a><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;">In Photoshop a texture is just something, an overlay, an image layer, a way to add some sort of depth to the image which wasn&#8217;t there before.  There are many different reasons and motivations for using textures in Photoshop, and I&#8217;m here to quickly educate the curious reader on how to use grunge textures in Photoshop.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><strong>First off, why grunge?</strong></p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;">I don&#8217;t know why I like the feeling of grunge textures.  Maybe it&#8217;s because I&#8217;m trying to re-create the feeling I get walking through Berlin or Detroit, maybe it&#8217;s because I&#8217;m a cliche and am just following the crowd. <a
href="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2007/10/17/joeyl-tutorial-review-behind-the-scenes/">Joey Lawrence</a> uses grunge texturing techniques, and I bought the Joey L Photoshop <span
class="caps">DVD </span>Tutorial, so obviously I&#8217;m just copying his style.  Maybe, but some people say that everything is just a copy of a copy of a copy.  I know this because Tyler knows this and because Fight Club is one of my favorite books/movies.  What I do know is that sometimes I take a photo and it&#8217;s perfectly exposed and has great shadows and yet it just doesn&#8217;t have the look, the texture that I want the image to have, so I have to go about adding such elements in Photoshop.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><strong>So, what&#8217;s a texture?</strong></p></p><p><p
style="text-align: justify;">A texture is a separate image which is overlayed over your original image, and through the use of different blending techniques, defines a part of the image.  Textures can be used to change the mood or intended interpretation of the original concept which was in your head when you took the photo.  If an image is nothing but a story and the photographer is just the author, then textures are just visual storytelling tools.<br
/> Where do textures come from?<br
/></p><p
style="text-align: justify;">Anywhere, any image can be used as a texture and currently I prefer to use concrete and street art textures.  I use custom images, which means that I photograph walls and doors and parts of cities which I think have an interesting texture or feeling, specifically to use as textures in Photoshop.  I generally like creating images where the original photo, and the texture images are all taken in the same location.  So if I do a portrait shoot in Winterthur, Switzerland, I will probably use textures shot in that area as well.  I like this idea because it means you&#8217;re including environmental elements of the shooting location in the processing of the image, and then the final image is a combination of the subject as well as of the environment where the original image was produced.  Once you have a image to use as a texture, how is it used in Photoshop?</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: center;"><strong><p><a
href="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2008/12/07/random-photoshop-tutorial-grunge-textures/"><em>Click here to view the embedded video.</em></a></p></strong></p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><strong><a
href="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/wp-content/uploads/amber.jpg"><img
class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-688" title="Amber" src="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/wp-content/uploads/amber-300x199.jpg" alt="" width="250" /></a>How Do You Add A Texture in Photoshop?</strong></p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;">If you&#8217;re visually inclined, check out the video tutorial above, which goes through how I created the Textured Sad Clown image. To add a texture to an image in Photoshop (or any other image edition program with layers) you just open the texture image and your main image, and then you copy the texture to the image to the main image.  The texture will be imported as a separate layer, and now you just need to blend the texture into the layer below it.  There are a number of different blending modes and techniques, which can be used to blend your texture into the final image.  The two main ways to blend texture into the original image are via the blending mode, and then via masking of the texture layer.  The blending mode defines how the colors, luminosity, tones, and visual parts of the texture blend into the layer below it.  So, for example, if you choose &#8220;multiply&#8221; as a blending mode, then similar tones are multiplied together, producing a darker image.  If it&#8217;s not the look you want, try another one till the image starts to look good.  What is &#8220;good?&#8221;  Good is whatever you think it is.  There&#8217;s never one blending mode which works for each image and concept.  You just go through them all till you find one that you like.  Once you settle on a blending mode, you&#8217;ll probably still want to modify it to bring out different aspects of the image.  This is done by masking.  Masking is a technique to mask out or hide parts of a layer.  It&#8217;s a non-destructive editing technique which is pretty essential in Photoshop.  For example, with a portrait, you probably don&#8217;t want the texture layer to block out or dramatically change the face of your subject.  So after selecting the layer mask on the texture layer, I can paint over Amber&#8217;s face, so  her features aren&#8217;t hidden.  The overall opacity of the image can also be reduced to uniformly reduce the impact of the texture layer.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Obtaining Textures</strong></p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;">I&#8217;m continually adding to my texture library.  It currently includes textures from Zurich, New Orleans, Tokyo, Winterthur, anywhere that I find a cool surface to shoot.  The more textures you have, the more story telling elements you have at your disposal.  I don&#8217;t use texturing techniques on every image, sometimes I want a certain look, sometimes I don&#8217;t.  Sometimes it looks cool, sometimes it&#8217;s a cliche.  Do what feels right to you when processing in Photoshop.  If you limit yourself to a Joey L style or the Scott Kelby 7 Steps, then your images will look like those of a thousand other people.  Is that what you want?  Maybe every photo I take is just a copy of a copy of a copy.  But so far I haven&#8217;t found that to be the case.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;">If you&#8217;re interested in trying out some texturing effects in Photoshop but don&#8217;t have any images to use, and you live inside a white box without a key, or it&#8217;s cold outside and you&#8217;re not in the mood to go shooting, or you just want to get started right now this second&#8230;</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;">Here is a sample of my Texture library to download and fool around with.  It includes custom images produced in the old industrial areas of Winterthur, Switzerland.  These textures are free to use for non-commercial work and for educational non-profit uses. &#160;When publishing an image, please add a credit for American Peyote, and link back to www.americanpeyote.com and please don&#8217;t hotlink to the Winterthur Textures zip file.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: center;"><a
href="http://www.americanpeyote.com/textures/Winterthur_Textures.zip">Winterthur Textures Library</a></p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;">I would be interested in seeing how you use these textures, so feel free to email me samples of your creations.</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;">Additional Texture Library Sites:</p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><a
href="http://veredgf.fredfarm.com/textura/index.html" target="_blank">Textura</a></p><br
/><p
style="text-align: justify;"><a
href="http://veredgf.fredfarm.com/textura/index.html" target="_blank"></a><a
href="http://www.texturewarehouse.com/gallery/" target="_blank">Texture Warehouse</a></p></p> ]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2008/12/07/random-photoshop-tutorial-grunge-textures/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>6</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>Photoshop Express &#8211; Divine Deliverance</title><link>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2008/03/27/photoshop-express-divine-deliverance/</link> <comments>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2008/03/27/photoshop-express-divine-deliverance/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Thu, 27 Mar 2008 12:04:17 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Mark</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Photoshop]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Express]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Flickr]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Image_Editing]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Photoshop_Express]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2008/03/27/photoshop-express-divine-deliverance/</guid> <description><![CDATA[In the dark ages there came to pass the revelation in imaging technology, which has since come to define and dominate the photo world.&#160; Photoshop, has and will continue to be the premier photo editing go-to program for millions of minions &#8211; but it what form will the program take?&#160; The introduction of Adobe Photoshop [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><div
align="center"><br
/><div
align="justify">In the dark ages there came to pass the revelation in imaging technology, which has since come to define and dominate the photo world.&nbsp; Photoshop, has and will continue to be the premier photo editing go-to program for millions of minions &#8211; but it what form will the program take?&nbsp; The introduction of Adobe Photoshop Lightroom brings the easy of photo organization and keywording to a new level.&nbsp; Work-flows are faster, letting one access and edit images with gleeful ease.<br
/></div><br
/> <a
target="_blank" href="http://americanpeyote.photoshop.com/"><img
alt="" src="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/wp-content/uploads/express_1.jpg" /></a></div><br
/> But when one has images and feels a need to share them Photoshop and Lightroom falter, for they offer no output directly to the web.&nbsp; And if your image are not on the web, then they don&#8217;t exist.&nbsp; Images, like cartoons die without the attention of viewers.<br
/> <br
/> This is why we love Flickr.&nbsp; The easy of image uploading and keyword tagging means you can post and distribute your images across the web in femtoseconds.<br
/> <br
/><div
align="justify">What if some freak accident fused the awesomeness of Photoshop with the web-coolness of Flickr?<br
/></div><br
/><div
align="center"><a
target="_blank" href="http://americanpeyote.photoshop.com/"><img
src="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/wp-content/uploads/express_2.jpg" alt="" /></a><br
/></div><br
/><div
align="justify">Bow down Earthly photo-crazed mortals, for the Divine ones from the digital sanctuary have again blessed us with new gifts.<br
/> <br
/> <strong>Photoshop Express</strong><br
/> <br
/> The cosmic programmers at Adobe seem to have taken the best of Photoshop and Lightroom and fused those excellent image editing and browsing tools with the goodness of Flickr.<br
/> <br
/> With a free Photoshop Express account one gets 2 GB of storage and a browsing and image editing interface similar to Adobe Lightroom.&nbsp; You can upload images, edit them, their colors, tones, crop, fix exposure, red eye, white balance,sharpen, and do black and white conversions, but that&#8217;s not all.<br
/> <br
/> Images can be distributed similar to Flickr, which means embedding images in websites and blogs and having them linked to you Photoshop Express account.&nbsp; Naturally you can set up a gallery and show your images directly from Express.&nbsp; The really cool thing is the images are not public until you make them so.&nbsp; In Flickr everything is just up on your photostream.&nbsp; Express also offers integration with Facebook, Photobucket and Picasa.<br
/> <br
/> <strong>The Future with Photoshop Express?</strong><br
/> <br
/> Sweet Jesus, just imagine the future with me for a second&#8230;<br
/> You take a picture with your WiFi enabled camera, it uploads directly to Photoshop Express, with your WiFi laptop you do the editing and then distribute you digital media to blogs and website, all online, no computer program to load on a computer, it&#8217;s all online, in the air, across the radio waves.&nbsp; The need for redundant backup harddrives at home is less needed and you can access and edit your photos anywhere with an internet connection.<br
/> <br
/> ...or whatever, brass tacks Photoshop Express is a pretty kickass &#8211; a cool photo editing and sharing platform, and it&#8217;s what we&#8217;ve been expecting for a while.&nbsp; Program distribution over the net, and all you need is a license agreement with the provider.&nbsp; Many are surprised Microsoft hasn&#8217;t already done this with Windows.<br
/> <br
/> Here&#8217;s the future: No software, just onlineware, nolineware, and for now it&#8217;s freeware, but for how long?<br
/> <br
/> You can sign up here:<br
/> <br
/> <a
href="http://www.photoshop.com/express/" target="_blank">Photoshop Express</a><br
/> <br
/> And quick tutorials are here:<br
/> <br
/> <a
href="http://www.photoshopexpresstechniques.com/" target="_blank">Photoshop Express Techniques</a></div></p> ]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2008/03/27/photoshop-express-divine-deliverance/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>0</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>Joey L Photoshop Tutorial &#8211; After the Honeymoon</title><link>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2008/03/12/joey-l-photoshop-tutorial-after-the-honeymoon/</link> <comments>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2008/03/12/joey-l-photoshop-tutorial-after-the-honeymoon/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Wed, 12 Mar 2008 07:59:36 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Mark</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Photoshop]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Style]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Joey_L]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Joey_Lawrence]]></category> <category><![CDATA[review]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Tutorial]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2008/03/12/joey-l-photoshop-tutorial-after-the-honeymoon/</guid> <description><![CDATA[The worth of any product does not lie in the first impression, but is rather exposed after having used the thing for an extended time period.&#160; Given the turnover in digital camera technology, 4 months is probably a decent time frame to assess the worth of the Joey L Behind the Scenes Photoshop DVD Tutorial.&#160; [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><div
align="justify">The worth of any product does not lie in the first impression, but is rather exposed after having used the thing for an extended time period.&nbsp; Given the turnover in digital camera technology, 4 months is probably a decent time frame to assess the worth of the <a
href="http://tutorial.joeyl.com/" target="_blank">Joey L Behind the Scenes Photoshop <span
class="caps">DVD </span>Tutorial</a>.&nbsp; I purchased the Joey <span
class="caps">L DVD </span>Photoshop Tutorial just after it was released in October of 2007 and it is now March of 2008.&nbsp; After having viewed and used the tutorial for an extended period, did it have a lasting, positive impact on my image making abilities?&nbsp; Am I now a Photoshop Buddha?&nbsp; Is it time for me to organize my own <span
class="caps">DVD</span> and start teaching workshops?&nbsp; Was the Tutorial a wise investment in my education or an overpriced, rash, ill-thought out toss of my money out the digital window?<br
/></div><br
/> <br
/> <br
/><div
align="center"><a
href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/americanpeyote/2090436735/" title="Relax Hand Hard Shadow by American Peyote, on Flickr"><img
width="240" height="180" src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2118/2090436735_1589fdb061_m.jpg" alt="Relax Hand Hard Shadow" /></a></div><br
/> <br
/> <br
/><div
align="justify"><strong>The Back Story</strong><br
/> <br
/> There are few things which I view with a need-it-now mentality, in particular when it comes to education.&nbsp; It might suck to learn long division as a disgruntled youth, but it pays dividends later in life when you can calculate things fifty times faster than someone who needs a calculator.<br
/> <br
/> Similarly, I didn&#8217;t buy the Joey <span
class="caps">L DVD</span> thinking it would change my Photoshop skills overnight, but rather, over time it would either have a positive, or absent affect.&nbsp; The purpose of this extended After-the-Honeymoon review is to look at how the material from the Joey <span
class="caps">L DVD</span> affected my photoshop and photography capabilities &#8211; after the initial joy of buying another digital imaging product had worn off.<br
/> <br
/> <strong>First: Why Buy a <span
class="caps">DVD </span>Tutorial?</strong><br
/> <br
/> The main criticism of the Joey <span
class="caps">L DVD </span>Tutorial in various internet circles is that it&#8217;s overpriced, and doesn&#8217;t show anything that can&#8217;t be learned on the internet, either for free, or via modest monetary costs.&nbsp; So why buy it?<br
/> <br
/> It&#8217;s true, there are countless opportunities to <a
href="http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2008/03/03/learning-photography-online-a-road-map-to-madness/">learn Photoshop and Photography on the web</a>.&nbsp; Sites like <a
href="http://www.scottkelby.com/" target="_blank">Scott Kelby</a>, <a
href="http://www.layersmagazine.com/" target="_blank">Layers Magazine</a>, <a
href="http://www.photoshopusertv.com/" target="_blank">Photoshop User TV</a>, <a
href="http://www.russellbrown.com/tips_tech.html" target="_blank">Dr. Brown</a>, and a number of random totally free videos and written tutorials (often with sample files) are sitting there in virtual space, begging to be viewed.&nbsp; There&#8217;s also libraries of books on-hand dealing with every aspect of Photoshop.<br
/> <br
/> I also know from experience that a number of the tutorials are little more than simple near-pointless tips on using curves, the healing brush, and converting to Black and White.&nbsp; Not all of course, the paid ones have more real value and there are many gems at Layers Magazine.&nbsp; However, my main experience is that many almost universally use bland uninspiring images for their examples, and often times it feels like I&#8217;m watching a copy of a copy of a copy.&nbsp; I was looking for something more original to supplement my Photoshop education.<br
/> <br
/> One main draw of the Joey <span
class="caps">L DVD</span> tutorial is that <a
href="http://www.joeyl.com/" target="_blank">Joey Lawrence</a> is an actual working photographer.&nbsp; A dynamic beacon of creativity in an industry of imitators.&nbsp; The draw of learning from an active Pro is unique for me, as I often have the feeling that too many tutorials are done by people who realized it was more profitable to teach Photoshop instead of being a photographer.&nbsp; This is probably a pessimistic view, and there&#8217;s really nothing wrong with that business model, I encourage folks to make money in any legal fashion they wish, and teaching is one of the noblest professions.&nbsp; Still, I get my science education from world class-researchers.&nbsp; Why skimp on my Photoshop education?<br
/> <br
/> A tutorial like the Joey <span
class="caps">L DVD</span> instantly makes me think of photography workshops.&nbsp; Workshops are popular from a few perspectives; when you get to the point as a photographer that you want to expand your creative consciousness or skills in a certain areas, or you travel to some distant hard-to-organize location.&nbsp; Workshops are generally considered to be money-well-spent, and in general I would never spend money on a workshop because many just seem like an excuse for people with too much money to pay someone to tell them to use their camera equipment.&nbsp; There are exceptions, if David Hobby or Don Giannati flew into Zurich for a Strobist or Lighting Essentials workshop, I&#8217;d probably be there to welcome them at the airport.&nbsp; Basically, I wanted a Photoshop tutorial, and the Joey <span
class="caps">L DVD</span> seemed like a good fit.<br
/></div><br
/> <br
/> <br
/><div
align="center"><a
title="Hanging Hand by American Peyote, on Flickr" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/americanpeyote/1729950672/"><img
width="240" height="201" alt="Hanging Hand" src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2214/1729950672_358a6bc534_m.jpg" /></a></div><br
/> <br
/> <br
/><div
align="justify"><strong>Playing and Criticism</strong><br
/> <br
/> Another main criticism is that Joey doesn&#8217;t teach good Photoshop technique.&nbsp; From a technical stand-point I&#8217;d say this is true &#8211; but if I was technically a Photoshop whiz, I wouldn&#8217;t have bought the Tutorial in the first place.&nbsp; The Joey L tutorial is primarily about using destructive editing techniques and just doing what &quot;seems&quot; right for the image &#8211; you know, to make it look good.&nbsp; I don&#8217;t really think this is a bad thing.&nbsp; This is what artistic expression is all about, if you stick to rigid guidelines in books and always listen to your teachers, you&#8217;ll always be one step behind your peers and more or less copying from the <em>old Master&#8217;s</em>.<br
/> <br
/> If you copy what Joey does point-for-point, you&#8217;re not learning anything that a monkey couldn&#8217;t learn (yes, it could take a generation or two of breeding and genetic engineering).&nbsp; Anytime you&#8217;re confronted with a large, intimidating construct like biomechanics, quantum physics or Photoshop, playing around isn&#8217;t such a bad thing &#8211; and should be encouraged.&nbsp; &quot;Playing around&quot; has brought more ground breaking discoveries than I care to list, including penicillin and bubble wrap.&nbsp; Playing in Photoshop is an important lesson I&#8217;ve taken away from the tutorial, which is also how Dave Hill developed his legendary style that so many geeks try to achieve.&nbsp; This doesn&#8217;t mean I use the techniques Mr. Lawrence has described in his tutorial.&nbsp; I do Photoshop with my own workflow and so should you.&nbsp; But it&#8217;s not bad to learn from someone who isn&#8217;t using Adobe standard practices.<br
/> <br
/> <strong>Ah, But the Cost</strong><br
/> <br
/> The Joey <span
class="caps">L DVD</span> is not cheap, but education is what the student makes of it more so than what the teacher teaches.&nbsp; This is contrary to many philosophies of modern pedagogy, but after going through three engineering degrees and a few semesters as a teaching assistant, I feel comfortable saying that a motivated student will learn no matter how dimwitted the professor may be.&nbsp; Ahhh, but inspiration from a teacher, is sometimes priceless.&nbsp; The Joey <span
class="caps">L DVD</span> was inspiring for me, and that is hard to put a dollar sign on.&nbsp; But it might not be for other pupils.<br
/> <br
/> <strong>Draw Like the Maple Tree Young Grasshopper</strong><br
/> <br
/> I feel like the <span
class="caps">DVD</span> has helped open up the horizons of Photoshop.&nbsp; This doesn&#8217;t mean that now I think that every photo needs to emulate Dave Hill and Joey Lawrence, it just means that my mind is more open to what I can do with the raw image &#8211; and the <span
class="caps">DVD </span>Tutorial had a part in that.<br
/> <br
/> I love to draw and do images on paper, but I&#8217;ve generally felt constrained in Photoshop, &quot;Hmmmm, I should make layers with correct names and make sure I can go back and change everything.&quot;&nbsp; So, again one of the important lessons from the Joey <span
class="caps">L DVD</span> is that a desire to play in Photoshop is essential, the program is a tool, not a defined process.&nbsp; My Photoshop skills are getting more fluid and playful, which opens up more creative directions in photo manipulation &#8211; and hence visual expression.<br
/> <br
/> <strong>Was the Joey L Tutorial a good buy?</strong><br
/> <br
/> After 4 months, I&#8217;m still comfortable with the amount of money I threw down for the Joey <span
class="caps">L DVD</span>.&nbsp; I come back to it and replay a lesson here and there when I need to, thinking back to the techniques, imagining how to use and create them differently, and often also disregarding them and doing something different.<br
/> <br
/> I like being able to replay different lessons quickly, and then go back to other projects &#8211; something you can&#8217;t do with a workshop (unless they include a <span
class="caps">DVD</span>).&nbsp; I&#8217;ll probably never buy another <span
class="caps">DVD</span> like this again (ok, maybe one), the exception being the forthcoming <a
href="http://www.strobist.com/" target="_blank">Strobist</a> DVDs or the offerings from <a
href="http://www.lighting-essentials.com/" target="_blank">Lighting Essentials</a>.<br
/> <br
/> Why not go crazy buying more DVDs?&nbsp; Because I&#8217;ve hit the point where all the other fine points of Photoshop can be easily found or discovered, maybe I didn&#8217;t need to buy the Joey <span
class="caps">L DVD</span> to get to this point, but that&#8217;s the way I&#8217;ve arrived here, and I don&#8217;t regret the path I&#8217;ve taken.<br
/> <br
/> <strong>Brass Tacks</strong><br
/> <br
/> Here&#8217;s the thing, with Photoshop I was looking for a spark, something to open the flood gates and broaden my horizons on this subject of digital post-processing.&nbsp; The Joey L Tutorial <span
class="caps">DVD</span> did that &#8211; exactly that &#8211; I see images in layers and masks and color shifts and shadowed hues now.&nbsp; When I look at setting up a shot, I think about the post-processing, the way the lighting will define how the image can be manipulated later.&nbsp; This isn&#8217;t a certain style, it&#8217;s an addition to my digital visualization abilities &#8211; the same as visualizing a wide angle effect before taking a picture.&nbsp; The horizons for communicating a certain message have now been expanded.<br
/> <br
/> Could the Joey L Tutorial <span
class="caps">DVD</span> have been done better?&nbsp; The crazy thing about the Joey L Tutorial <span
class="caps">DVD</span> is that it could have been one of the most fantastic photography-centered Photoshop learning tools ever created &#8211; if it had been created with an eye towards integrating the lighting and photoshop techniques.&nbsp; However, it doesn&#8217;t take long to see for yourself which type of images &quot;work&quot; and which ones &quot;don&#8217;t&quot; based on their lighting.&nbsp; No Photoshop action can &quot;fix&quot; images which don&#8217;t have the right lighting to start with.&nbsp; That&#8217;s the shortcoming of the Joey <span
class="caps">L DVD</span>, the lighting-processing connection is mostly missing.&nbsp; However, playing around with different images and the Joey L actions will quickly reveal how lighting affects the post-processing.<br
/> <br
/> Here&#8217;s an example, both of the images shown below were processed using the Joey L Signature Action, and should be slightly representative of how this technique works.&nbsp; It&#8217;s pretty obvious how the first image doesn&#8217;t really look all that great.&nbsp; It&#8217;s flat and desaturated, and more or less boring.&nbsp; This is because the face and torso are turned away from the light source, and all we have is definition of the jacket. However, the second image is better-lit, and renders the deep-grudge shadows much better than the first one.&nbsp; Once you see which type of images and lighting combinations <em>work</em> it&#8217;s easy to draw up in your mind how to design shots specifically for this type of deep-shadow processing.<br
/> <br
/></div><br
/><div
align="center"><br
/><table
width="499" height="279" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="0" border="0" align=""></p><tbody><tr><td
align="center"><a
href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/americanpeyote/2281658638/" title="Floating in the Air by American Peyote, on Flickr"><img
width="240" height="209" src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3059/2281658638_c278b8a2f5_m.jpg" alt="Floating in the Air" /></a></td><td><a
title="Drama in the Air by American Peyote, on Flickr" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/americanpeyote/2281658792/"><img
width="240" height="160" alt="Drama in the Air" src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2320/2281658792_910b0fa9a1_m.jpg" /></a></td></tr><tr><td
align="left">Poor lighting, only shadow and definition in the jacket</td><td>Better lighting, good shadow definition of the arms, torso, and face.</td></tr></tbody><br
/></table><br
/></div><br
/><div
align="justify"><strong><br
/> Monkey See Monkey Do?</strong><br
/> <br
/> There is a pervading attitude from many dark corners of the web that if you buy his <span
class="caps">DVD</span> to learn from someone like Joey Lawrence, you&#8217;re trying to adopt or steal his look/style instead of developing your own.&nbsp; If such an attitude existed in the scientific research world, we&#8217;d still be riding horses and the telegraph would probably be 200 years from being invented.&nbsp; In general everything has been done before.&nbsp; There are very few truly new things.&nbsp; There was <a
href="http://andrzejdragan.com/" target="_blank">Dragan</a>, people copied him by creating Photoshop actions, Joey Lawrence no doubt learned from these influences, and developed his own style.&nbsp; He made a <span
class="caps">DVD</span>, I bought it, and here we are.&nbsp; That&#8217;s how progress and the evolution of style sometimes works in the digital imaging world.<br
/> <br
/> As you move through life you learn things &#8211; and the knowledge you retain becomes tools which you can use to do other things: build bridges, take pictures, climb mountains, relax on a beach.&nbsp; The real mistake is not learning as much as you can and using those tools as desired.&nbsp; I didn&#8217;t set out to imitate Joey Lawrence, or to create iconic art that will stand the test of time.&nbsp; But if that iconic art thing happens, well &#8211; cool.<br
/> <br
/> The Joey L Tutorial <span
class="caps">DVD</span> is just an addition to my photography digital image making toolset, what comes next no one knows.&nbsp; Should you buy the Joey <span
class="caps">L DVD </span>Tutorial, or that Canon 85 mm lens or that Nikon <span
class="caps">D300</span>?&nbsp; Will a set of Profoto strobes make you a better photographer?&nbsp; Figure out what you &quot;need&quot; to accomplish what you&#8217;re seeking to accomplish &#8211; acquire those tools, and then go write your book, develop your look, live your life, whatever.<br
/> <br
/> No one single piece of knowledge or equipment will improve your skills in life unless you&#8217;re motivated to push yourself to the next level, but once you know how things work&#8230;well, maybe I&#8217;m working on my own tutorial <span
class="caps">DVD</span>&#8230;</div> ]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://blog.americanpeyote.com/2008/03/12/joey-l-photoshop-tutorial-after-the-honeymoon/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>13</slash:comments> </item> </channel> </rss>
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