Studio Workshop Wonderings
Workshops for this week
Note: You do not
have to sign up for these workshops. Just drop in.
There are no fees and most workshops use Intermediate and Advanced
Adobe Photoshop CS or Elements.
All workshops are in the Camera Club Studio Classroom.
Intermediate Digital Photography Workshop
Thursday, February 1, 9:30 to
11:00
"Advanced Photo Organization and
Creations"
presented by Howard Benedict
We usually only teach
Organizing a Lifetime of Photos
at a Basic and Intermediate level. However, Elements v5.0 offers many
advanced
options which may be unknown and unused by most members. This week we
will do a
quick review of the Basic and Intermediate features and then launch
into many
of these Advanced features to bring your skill level higher and add
much more
fun and “Wow” features to your work.
Time will be given at the end of the session for questions and
answers.
Advanced Digital Photography Workshop
Thursday, February 1
The Advanced Digitial Photography Workshop will not be held this Thursday.
It will resume on Thursday, February 8th at 1:00 pm. The topic
will be "Curves" lead by Al Crawford. Al will also have a plug in
available at that time that can make curves available in Photoshop
Elements.
Black & White Study Group
Friday, February 2, 9:30 to 11:00
"Taking
Pictures in Black and White" a discussion lead by Bruce Zimmerman
Bring your
cameras. After we view each other's photos Bruce will lead a
discussion on taking black and white photographs. After that
everyone will go outside and take pictures around the East Center
applying the principles discussed.
Also bring some of your black and white photos to share with the rest
of the group. This will help you and everyone else to improve on
their photography.
Resizing Images for Printing
Last week Al Crawford presented a lesson how to resize images for
printing. Here is the handout for that lesson for those who
missed it.
Principle: Do
not
changing any pixels in your image until you absolutely have to
Edit your image
The first step is to edit your image without resizing. If there
are parts of your image that you know will need cropped out you may
wish to do so before editing. Otherwise, leave cropping until
later.
Crop your image
Depending on your needs you may crop your image before you edit, after
you edit but before you resize your image for printing, or after you
resize your image.
- Select the crop tool from the tool bar.
- In the tool menu bar (the bottom row of menu items) set the
"Resolution" to blank. This will make your crop non-destructive
in that none of the pixels remaining after the crop will be modified.
- If you wish to crop free form with no restrictions make sure that
both the "Width" and "Height" boxes are blank. This can be done
by changing the Aspect Ratio to "No Restriction" in Elements 4 & 5
or clicking on "Clear" in Elements 3. When this is done the
resolution (DPI) of the image will remain unchanged when you crop.
- If you wish to crop to a specific ratio you may select that ratio
in "Aspect Ratio" with the drop-down menu or you may enter your print
size in "Width" and "Height". All of the preset ratios are in the
landscape mode with the width larger than the height.
(Note: Elements 3 does not have preset ratios) By clicking
between the width and height boxes you can change this to a portrait
ratio. Using this method the resolution (DPI) of the image will
automaticly adjust to make your print size the same as your width and
height settings. Hopefully this will be between 180 and 720.
Resizing your image
Directly out of the camera your images are not likely to be sized
correctly or proportioned correctly to print exactly the way you want
it to. Also, there is no need to resample the image unless the
resolution gets below 180.
- To resize without
resampling:
- In the main menu go to "Image" then "Resize" then "Image Size".
- At the bottom of the "Image Size" dialog box uncheck "Resample Image"
- In the "Width" box enter the width of your printed image.
Note the "Height" will change to maintain proportion and the
"Resolution" will adjust so that the Resolution value times the Width
will equal the Width in pixels (top panel).
- If your "Height" is longer than your final image size then you
are done. If your "Height" is less than your desired image size
then enter the correct "Height" and the "Width" will adjust to
something larger that the final width.
- Click OK.
- If your resolution is now less
than 180:
- In the main menu go to "Image" then "Resize" then "Image Size".
- At the bottom of the "Image Size" dialog box check "Resample Image"
- In the drop-down menue of "Resample Image" select "Bicubic
Smoother"
- Change the Width or Height box to a value exactly double of its
original value.
- Click OK
- Again, in the main menu go to "Image" then "Resize" then "Image
Size".
- Unclick "Resample Image"
- Change the Width or Height box to its correct value (which will
be exactly half of what it had been set to).
- Click OK
- Note: You could, with very good images, get acceptable
results by multiplying the original size by either 3 or 4. But
the larger you enlarge the image the lower the quality. You can
always do well with doubling.
- If you are printing borderless
then: You
may print directly. The printer will automaticly crop the side
that is too long to fit by croping equaly on the top and bottom (or the
left and right.) If this is not satisfactory you should crop
without resampling to the correct size.
- If you are printing with a
border then: Crop without resampling.