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Showing posts from March, 2025

Retouching Techniques Reflection

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 Here is my  Retouching Techniques Reflection. This is my image before spot healing: This is the same image after using spot healing: I chose this image because most of the snow was around the dogs face, which made it easier for me to remove the snow with the spot healing tool. The only part that I struggled with here is near the little collar because I found it difficult to tell if the dog had a patch of white fur or if it was snow. I still used the spot healing tool around that area. I think the dog had some white patches of fur, which is really cool since he is mostly brown.  This is my image before using clone stamping:                                             This is the same image after clone stamping:  I saw you stamp the eye to show me why the clone stamping tool wasn't working for me originally. So, I decided to stamp the eyes on the circle parts ...

Non-Destructive Image Adjustments

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 This is my Non-Destructive Image Adjustments Blog. This is Color Fill: I chose the blue fill color and I lowered the opacity so the original photo will have a nice blue background.  This is Gradient Fill: I chose the white, which allowed the image to have a nice foggy background, which puts emphasis on the cat and child. This is Brightness/Contrast: I made the image slightly brighter, which makes it more appealing to the viewer. This is Levels: I used the levels adjustment layer and changed the output levels to 5-255, which made the image significantly brighter.   This is Curves: I moved my cursor to almost the middle, which made the background slightly darker.  This is Exposure: I moved the exposure to +0.77, offset to -0.0518, and gamma correction to 0.85, which made the image become more exposed. This is Vibrance: I made the image's vibrance go to +65 and saturation to +8, which made the image pop. This is Hue/Saturation: I maxed out the density and fea...

Robot Final

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 This is my Robot Final Blogger.  Here is the image of my robot draft: Most of the process of creating this robot wasn't too difficult. I just had to find images online and put them together to make a cool robot. The most difficult part in the creation of this robot was definitely the display on the screen. I had to look for an image of a display on a flat screen tv,  replace the person with my robot, shrink it and make it fit on screen on the old tv. Despite this, it was fun to do this part of the robot project.  This is the image of my robot final:  This part of the project was definitely more difficult compared to creating the draft. I originally wanted to put this root in an underwater cave, but I realized that a laboratory is also a perfectly good setting for my robot. The most difficult part of the project by far was creating a shadow for the robot. The method you showed was in class to create a shadow works, but it is tedious way to do it.  Instead, ...

Image File Formats Blog

  This is my image file formats blog.  Raster (bitmap) jpg, png, gif, bmp, psd, tiff, heic, psb, camera raw JPG (JPEG): JPG (or JPEG) stands for J oint Photographic Experts Group. This  image format known for compressing file size with lossy compression, making it ideal for web images and photos. It loses some quality with each save. PNG: PNG stands for Portable Network Graphics. It is a lossless format that supports transparency. It’s widely used for images with sharp edges or where a transparent background is needed, like logos and icons. GIF: GIF stands for Graphics Interchange Format. It is an older format that supports animations and transparency but is limited to 256 colors. It’s often used for simple animations and low-color graphics. BMP: BMP stands for Bitmap. Bitmap is an uncompressed image format, typically large in size, and widely supported but not efficient for web use due to its lack of compression. PSD: PSD stands for Photoshop Document. It pr...

Image Resolution Blog

 This is my image resolution blogger.  1. What is the difference between 300ppi and 72ppi? The difference between 300ppi and 72ppi is that both of these have different purposes. 300ppi is the standard for print images; this would allow it to print high quality images; making sure the image is crisp. The reason why 300ppi is the standard for print is because the human eye struggles to see the details when the ppi is over 300. Having the ppi at 300 for print allows for seamless printing for the person. 72 ppi is the standard for web images. This is because when the web image is at 72 ppi, it loads faster. This allows for a seamless experience for the person. I got this from just a google search. Here is the link:  https://www.google.com/search?q=What+is+the+difference+between+300ppi+and+72ppi%3F&rlz=1C5GCEM_enUS1126US1126&oq=What+is+the+difference+between+300ppi+and+72ppi%3F&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUqBggAEEUYOzIGCAAQRRg7MggIARAAGBYYHjIKCAIQABgKGBYYHjINCAMQABiGAxiABBiK...