2. Photoshop is a raster graphics editor
developed and published by Adobe Systems
for MacOS and Windows.
Photoshop was created in 1988 by Thomas
and John Knoll. Since then, it has become the
de facto industry standard in raster graphics
editing, to the point that Photoshop has
become a generic trademark leading to its use
as a verb such as "to Photoshop an image,"
“Photoshopping" and “Photoshop contest",
though Adobe discourages such use.[5] It can
edit and compose raster images in multiple
layers and supports masks, alpha compositing
and several color models including RGB,
CMYK, CIELAB, spot colour and duotone.
For your A Level Photography
understanding how to subtly
edit your photography and be
experimental with your editing
to explore a topic is really
important. This week we are
going to show you basic
Photoshop techniques. If you
are familiar with Lightroom you
can also use this for editing but
this is not vital!
3. DPI stands for ‘Dots Per Inch’ which impacts
the quality of your Photographs printing. In
Photoshop we look at the PPI of the image
which stands for ‘Pixels Per Inch’. Your
Photographs should ideally be 300 PPI and
should be no smaller the 100 PPI. To see
what resolution your Photograph is open your
Photograph in Photoshop. Click the “Image”
menu and choose “Image Size.” Choose
“pixels/inch” from the Resolution drop-down
menu if it is not already displayed by default.
The number in the Resolution box is the PPI of
the photograph.
and…
4. +
-Crop Tool
-Brightness + Contrast
-Colour Balance
-Photo Filter
-Vibrance
-Hue/Saturation
-Shadow/Highlights
-Unsharp mask
Choose 1 to 2 Photographs from
your most recent shoot and try
using all the tools listed. Create
screen shots and enlargements
and create a double page
showing the editing you have
experimented with.
Subtle Editing Part 1!
5. -Dodge & Burn
-Healing tool
-Gradient for
fading & tone
-Spot Healing tool
Choose 1 to 2 Photographs from your most recent shoot
and try using all the tools listed. Create screen shots and
enlargements and create a double page showing the editing
you have experimented with.
Subtle Editing Part 2!
The key is to make changes that look natural.
6. Deadline: Monday 26th
November
This week……
-Create at least two double
pages of screen shots and
enlargements showing different
editing techniques. Make sure
these are clearly annotated and
you add your opinions.
-Choose two photographs from
your most recent shoot and
invert and print them onto
acetate ready for creating
Cyanotypes next week.
7. Deadline: Monday 26th
November
This week……
-Create at least two double
pages of screen shots and
enlargements showing different
editing techniques. Make sure
these are clearly annotated and
you add your opinions.
-Choose two photographs from
your most recent shoot and
invert and print them onto
acetate ready for creating
Cyanotypes next week.