Notes & summaries in raw form (i.e. unpolished, written-under-no-pressure) on books, blogs and stuff that I've read. Mainly for my reference but would be delighted if you find them useful.
Showing posts with label Book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book. Show all posts
December 30, 2013
Photoshop CS6: Visual QuickStart Guide/ Elaine Weinmann & Peter Lourekas
006.686 WEI
Very concise; fully illustrated. Organised by features.
Some handy tips I picked up:
p.205. Clip Adjustment layers
Hold down the ALT/ OPTION key; click between the line of two layers to clip/ unclip them.
p.208/ 209. On using the Histogram panel
How to read the histogram; what's well balanced (basically must cover the graph range), under-exposed (slanted towards left with gaps on the right); overexposed (slanted towards right with gaps on the left); shadow pixels clipped (graph is like under-exposed but raised all the way on the right); detail loss (where there are comb-tooth like gaps between the graph).
p.264. Photomerge command/ feature (via Bridge)
p.336 Puppet Wrap command
Edit > Puppet Wrap (use SHIFT/ ALT/ OPTION keys for effect)
p.377 Transform (e.g. detach) effects
After creating the effects, right-click the Effects listing on the layers panel, then "Choose Layer" from the context menu.
July 17, 2013
You Can Do a Graphic Novel/ Barbara Slate
The cover looks kiddish but this is an easy-to-understand, practical and informative book for those interested in creating a graphic novel.
Covers the how-tos of scripting, creating characters, plots, layouts.
It's not a very in-depth book but it doesn't have to be. Seems it's targeted at teens. Nonetheless I found this very insightful. I thought it covered the essentials.
Tips may seem somewhat simple but somehow they don't seem lightweight. Maybe because every piece of advise is steeped in practical experience.
Like turning off the overly critical voice that casts negativity to the whole creative process (So true! The creative craft is hard enough as it is).
Far from making motherhood statements, the advice are like timely reminders:
"Writing is rewriting. It is a rare writer who gets it on the first try."
The parts that were most practical for me:
Creating a profile of your character (e.. name, age, parents, siblings, describe the childhood, education, home life, employment, leisure activities, clothes, personal characteristics, love life, best friend, favourite colour, room mate... etc).
The "How to Plot" portion, much like working out a Gantt Chart for graphic novelists.
- Colour-code each character (e.g. post-it notes).
- Create columns, with each column representing chapters.
- Write the scene/ idea/ dialogue for each character on the coloured note.
- Place the note in each column (i.e. chapter).
Doing the above means the author is able to track the plot/ sub-plot, as "lived out" by each character, according to the chapters.
Brilliant.
The author's website, here.
June 22, 2013
Adobe Photoshop CS6 essentials/ Scott Onstott
One thing I learned from this book: manipulating text/ fonts and working in tandem with path/ vectors.
Use the Pen tool; draw a path (free form or straight); then select the Text tool; place over the path (cursor will add on a little symbol to show a path); click and type.
Easy to follow short exercises.
June 18, 2013
Painter X for photographers/ Martin Addison
Useful primer on Corel Painter. I'm using version 12 and can follow this easily even if its talking about an older version.
Comprehensive section on the various brushes, pens, pencils etc. Particularly useful on understanding the various Clone Brushes and their effects.
Dedicated section on Clone painting. With short descriptive tutorials and examples.
Customising brushes, paper textures.
Explains watercolours, oils and pastels, blender brushes, portrait painting, hand colouring, Layers, printing and presentations (colour management).
April 05, 2013
Adobe Photoshop CS6 Digital Classroom/ Jennifer Smith, AGI Creative Team 26
March 27, 2013
Secrets of Corel Painter Experts: Tips, Techniques, and Insights for Users of All Abilities/ Daryl Wise
Features individual Corel Painter users. Each digital artist shows a work, explains how its done. Most have a sequenced walk-through.
Plenty of inspiring works; insights into the digital art creation process using varying preferred techniques and styles.
A few artists I really liked (interestingly they happen to be asians):
- Song Yang http://www.zhajiang.com
- Benjamin
http://blog.sina.com.cn/benjamin - Youchan http://togoru.net
- Pete Revonkorpi http://peterrevonkorpi.daportfolio.com
March 22, 2013
The Hidden Power of Blend Modes in Adobe Photoshop/ Scott Valentine
January 18, 2013
UI Design with Adobe Illustrator: Discover the ease and power of using Illustrator to design Web sites and apps/ Rick Moore
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