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1 2017-08-03T16:54:51-07:00 Todd Taylor 040585dacbb7e1caa116d4fd9bc26ee5feb34450 20164 1 abstract image representing Adobe Photoshop plain 2017-08-03T16:54:51-07:00 Todd Taylor 040585dacbb7e1caa116d4fd9bc26ee5feb34450This page is referenced by:
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2017-08-17T18:44:13-07:00
3B: The Editing Interface and the DNA of Images
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Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum
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2017-10-10T16:47:52-07:00
Photoshop and Illustrator are by far the most famous and widely used image-creating and image-editing tools in the world. Photoshop, in particular, has been so influential that most people know what it means when you use the name as a verb, as in “That image can’t be real, it has to be Photoshopped.” One of the reasons that these applications are so popular and influential is because they were designed with the DNA of images in mind. The interfaces and workspaces in Photoshop and Illustrator are in fact organized according to the timeless principles and elements of visual design.
The image below compares the workspaces (also called the “interfaces”) of Photoshop and Illustrator. Even a complete novice can recognize, at a quick glance, things in this workspace that you would have seen around Leonardo da Vinci’s studio when he painted the Mona Lisa 500 years ago, such as a canvas, frame, paint brush, pens, pots of paint, and even the artist’s own hand.
But the interfaces involve much more than just the physical tools that artists use to create and edit images. The Photoshop interface on the left and the Illustrator interface on the right are so similar because both are designed to make it easy for you to realize the principles of and elements of visual composition. They make it easy for you to create compelling images.
For example, you might have heard of the “rule of thirds,” which suggests that it’s often more effective for you to place the subject of your image in one third of the frame, rather than the dead center. In the left interface from Photoshop, I’ve activated the Crop tool, which has automatically divided the frame horizontally and vertically into thirds. With the help of the Crop tool guidelines, you can see that Mona Lisa’s chin rests almost exactly on the top third of da Vinci’s composition. In the screenshot from Illustrator, I used the Eyedropper tool to select the paint color in the sky over Mona Lisa’s shoulder. I then activated the Color Guide properties panel, which analyzes da Vinci’s use of color and displays a bunch of color swatches that belong in the palette.
You can search the Internet for many outstanding primers on the principles and elements of image design, especially if you want to learn more. But I’ll breeze through a quick overview using the Mona Lisa to explain their roles in using Photoshop and Illustrator.
Elements: color, line, shape, texture, space, and typography
Da Vinci’s color palette, his choice of colors, is somber and muted, which produces a melancholy feel in the scene, as opposed to bright, saturated colors. There are a number of dominant lines in the landscape backdrop, but the more important lines are the thin veil across the forehead, the shadow line of the chin, and the outline of the posture of the body, which all convey a feeling of subdued composure. However, the most important lines are the mouth and eyes, which express the emotion of the subject. The complementary soft, round shapes of the forehead, cheeks, chest, and hands portray the subject as feminine and gentle. The texture of the gown makes the portrait feel photorealistic, centuries before photography was invented. The space around the subject’s head and the positioning of the subject vertically in the top-third of the frame let us known that this was a conventional portrait — which was almost like a photo ID at the time. There are currently some conspiracy theories about the hidden use of typography in the Mona Lisa — are they the source of a da Vinci code?
Principles: unity, balance, hierarchy, scale, emphasis, rhythm/contrast, and concept
Principles are often harder to define and determine, but we’ll give it a whirl to illustrate the point. The separation between the foreground and background in the portrait seems to lack unity — the subject is painted so realistically, but the background is contrived and artificial by contrast. You could argue that the concept of the painting is an obsessive attempt to capture a subtle expression, which might explain why da Vinci wanted the background to be weak, so that you focus attention on the face. As discussed already, the composition is well-balanced in the frame according to the rule of thirds. The facial expression in the top-third of the portrait is clearly the star, with the hands and landscape backdrop at the bottom of the hierarchy. The subject consumes at least two-thirds of the frame, and the scale of the mountains and water in the backdrop suggests that they are far away.
So, how does this quick romp through the principles and elements of images using the Mona Lisa help you understand Photoshop and Illustrator? Each of the elements of an image (color, line, shape, texture, type) has a digital tool for you to click. And each of the principles of visual composition (unity, balance, scale, etc.) has functions, commands, and gauges to help you achieve it. For example, the paint tools enable you to select specific colors and color palettes. And, as we’ve already shown, the Crop tool can help you visualize the rule of thirds for unity, balance, and scale.
In other words, the workspaces and interfaces of image-creating applications in Creative Cloud are designed to make it easy for you to bring together the elements of your composition and to apply the principles of visual design to make images. The table below outlines some of the relationships between image design and the specific tools and functions in Photoshop and Illustrator.
Artistic tools, commands, and functions Line Pen, Line Color Color, Color Guide, Swatches, Eyedropper Shape Rectangle, Ellipse, Polygon Texture Texture, Gradient Type Type, Character Scale Perspective, Scale Balance Align, Snap Hierarchy Layers, Arrange
Of course, there are important functions that are purely mechanical and not necessarily artistic. Even Leonardo da Vinci used his hands to grab things, and he needed blades and frames to build his canvasses. Below is a list of the more mechanical tools in Creative Cloud that are key to creating and editing images:Mechanical tools, commands, and functions Grabbing things Selection Arrow, Lasso, Marquee, Hand Magnifying glass Zoom Frame/crop, canvas Crop, Slice, Canvas Size, Image Size Paint brushes Brush Fill/stroke Paint Bucket, Properties Measure/align Rulers, Guidelines, Snapping
The tools and functions listed in the tables above are just a fraction of what’s available in Photoshop and Illustrator. Notice, however, that these tools are identical or similar in the two different applications. The reason for this is because both interfaces were built according to the elements and principles of image design. This is good news for you at least two reasons. First, once you get the hang of Photoshop, then it’s pretty easy to also learn Illustrator — or vice versa. Second, the way you create and edit images in both applications is very logical. It makes sense and it makes your work efficient and effective.
You might ask at this point: If Photoshop and Illustrator or so similar, then why are there two different applications? How do I pick between them? The next section, 3C, describes the differences between the applications so you can pick the right one. They’re both so powerful that some professionals are able to do all of their work in either one effectively. But, in a nutshell, Photoshop is better for editing photographs, and Illustrator is better for creating images from scratch. Before we turn to 3C, there is one last, hugely important aspect of both Photoshop and Illustrator that you must be aware of: working with layers.
Working with layers
The images you build in Photoshop and Illustrator are largely two-dimensional, and they’re typically meant to be viewed on a flat service, like paper, a screen, or a poster. Even so, these images are actually built in layers from the foreground to the background, and layer architecture is fundamental to working in Creative Cloud.
Painters commonly compose their work in layers. They might paint the entire background before adding the subject and the foreground. Researchers now use X-rays and other technologies to look beneath the finished top layers of famous paintings, such as Henri Matisse’s “Bathers by the River,” which might have as many as six versions with one layer painted on top of another.
In Photoshop and Illustrator, you can independently create and edit as many layers as you can handle. I often duplicate layers and then conceal and reveal them in different versions to see which approach works best. Working with layers is best explained and understood through the video tutorial so that you can see them in action. But layers are so important to working in Photoshop and Illustrator that they have to be mentioned at this point in the guide.
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2017-08-17T19:05:49-07:00
3C: Which Creative Cloud Application is Right for my Image Project?
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Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum
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2017-10-10T17:23:54-07:00
Photoshop CC (Photoshop Fix and Photoshop Mix for Mobile)
Photoshop is used primarily to edit and create images that are based on photographs, but it’s so powerful that you can use it to design almost anything, from a website to a magazine to a mobile app. You can even create a video in Photoshop. Still, I recommend that Photoshop be your default application for working with images. If you have a quick and easy edit of a photograph that doesn’t need to be very precise — perhaps for social media and not professional publication — then you might use Lightroom or Photoshop Fix (for mobile) to make a quick crop, rotation, brightness, or color adjustment. If you want to put together a photograph and text quickly — perhaps for social media — then you might use Spark Post. Photoshop Fix for mobile conveniently enables you to do many things on your devices, but it has only a fraction of the power of the full-blown application. Photoshop Mix for mobile enables you to create layers and composite images together. The Photoshop mobile apps integrate seamlessly with Photoshop CC for more advanced, precise editing and production.
Knowing your way around Photoshop is a skill that will serve you well throughout your college, professional, and personal life. If there’s any possibility of working in Photoshop in the time you have available, the education is definitely worth the investment. Eventually, you’ll want to accomplish more precise, advanced, and professional-quality images, which means you’ll eventually need to use Photoshop — so why not learn how it works now?
Illustrator CC (Illustrator Draw and Photoshop Sketch for Mobile)
Illustrator is used primarily to create images from scratch. It’s better than Photoshop at creating graphics and typography for precise print and online publication. The other big advantage of Illustrator is that it’s really good for making vector graphics — a concept that is spelled out in more detail in the tutorial.
Photoshop primarily uses pixels, which are like tiny dots of color, to compose images. But Illustrator uses mathematical formulas to make images. For example, in Photoshop there might be a hundred red pixels lined up in a row to represent a line between point A and point B. Illustrator vector graphics are actually a mathematical formula that draws a line between point A and point B with different properties, including a color like red.
The differences between pixels and vector graphics might be difficult to appreciate if you’re new to this, so here’s what you need to know: Illustrator is better for building graphic (not photographic) images, because it uses vector graphics that do not change in quality as you scale the image from very small to very large. In other words, an image built in Illustrator can be shrunk down to the size of stamp or blown up to the size of a billboard with no loss in quality or crispness. If you’re making graphics, infographics, or images with a lot of precise text and typology, then Illustrator is probably the right application.
Finally, like Illustrator Draw and Photoshop Express for mobile conveniently enables you to do many things on your devices, but it has only a fraction of the power of the full-blown application. These mobile apps integrate seamlessly with Illustrator CC and Photoshop CC for more advanced, precise editing and production.
Spark Post
Spark offers three web-based applications in one: Spark Post, Spark Page, and Spark Video. Spark Post is a quick and convenient way to make simple images, especially ones that combine a photograph with text. It’s ideal for quick social media content, and it can be an easy way for a novice to begin thinking about the elements and principles of image design since it has lots of built-in, preset templates, layouts, and designs to choose from. You can’t precisely edit images or create custom graphics or type beyond the provided presets, but you can create a quick image to download or share online very quickly, even from your mobile device.
Lightroom CC
Lightroom is a good choice if you have a lot of photographs to manage, especially if you need to organize and edit your collection in the field or through your mobile device. The current versions of Lightroom, including the mobile app, are especially convenient for photo processing, including cropping, rotating, and adjusting color, contrast, brightness, and sharpness. However, it is nowhere near Photoshop in terms of its ability to build images and fine-tune every aspect of a photograph. Its photo-processing features are nondestructive, which means that your original images are always preserved no matter how many edits you apply. Lightroom is especially powerful when synced with Creative Cloud, because you can make preliminary evaluations and adjustments during a shoot and then return to your studio for advanced editing in Photoshop. -
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2017-07-17T18:52:33-07:00
3A: Why Make an Image?
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Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum
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2017-08-17T18:42:36-07:00
For our purposes, we’ll define the word “image” as any two-dimensional visual object. Thus, photographs, graphic designs, paintings, and illustrations are the most common types of images. What is the “DNA” of images? What is their fundamental nature? When and why should you choose to make an image? And how should you go about planning, making, editing, and sharing an image using Creative Cloud?
On the one hand, images have been used across history for so many different purposes, by so many different people, and in so many different contexts that it’s impossible to say what an image really is or how images really work once and for all. Our collective story of images often beings with the prehistoric drawings scraped on the walls of caves, which are the first depictions of ideas before the invention of written language. We then tend to focus on famous paintings and portraits as the golden age of the image. But, of course, photography and cinematography in the industrial and media ages exploded our concepts of what images are and how they work.
On cave walls, on canvas, and even on photographic film or printed paper, images have long been flat and fixed in width and length — making them two-dimensional. You’re probably aware that digital, three-dimensional “painting” and photography are now possible, but the point is that our cultures have been thinking about images along two-dimensional planes for a very long time.
The previously distinct boundaries between photography, illustration, painting, graphic design, and cinematography have now completely blurred thanks to the ease with which everyone, not just advanced artists, can now combine these forms digitally. And there’s an interesting argument to be made that Photoshop CC is the primary image-creation tool that enabled this evolution. The boundaries between photography, illustration, graphics, and painting do not exist within the digital pixels of Photoshop CC, Illustrator CC, After Effects CC, and the rest of Creative Cloud, which is why this chapter groups all of these visual modes together under the category of image.
Despite the rapidly evolving media landscape, images continue to be used in some fairly universal ways. The fundamental principles of visual design remain remarkably consistent. These principles, in fact, determine the way that tools, menus, interfaces, and workspaces in Photoshop and Illustrator operate, which are explained in the next section, 3B.
Images are a particularly effective way to create a scene, although such scenes are typically still and not moving or animated like the real world or in film. The old saying goes that “the eyes are the window to the soul,” in which case, your eyes are also your soul’s window to the world. There’s also the expression that “a picture is worth a thousand words,” which points to the immense power of visual representation and communication. An image can create a sensory illusion that transports our thoughts and awareness into a virtual scene or the perspective of the artist, creator, or compositor. Our brains are hard-wired to hunt down new experiences — in other words, we’re always seeking to learn more, and vision is one of the primary modes for taking in new perspectives. We’re naturally drawn to well-crafted images because we learn something from them.
This chapter helps you figure out how to represent things visually. It encourages you to create compelling images and scenes that share your perspective with your audience, viewers, or readers. It focuses mostly on Photoshop and Illustrator, which are advanced image-making and editing applications, but you can also use this chapter with other applications such as Spark Post and Lightroom CC.