If you’ve stared in awe at the recent influx of colorized black and white photos popping up online, wondering just how someone was able to bring such life to an image, here’s your answer. Mads Madsen, a talented 18-year-old Photoshop artist, has created a detailed six-minute video documenting the process he uses to add color to historic images.
At this point doctored and enhanced photos are so ubiquitous that we tend to assume any photo we’re looking at has gone through some type of processing. And programs like Photoshop are always releasing new tools
What could be a better use of Photoshop filters than filtering Photoshop? That’s exactly what Device did in this delightfully meta little Photoshop tribute. Warning: you might want to turn down your volume a bit.
If you’ve been experiencing unstable WiFi as well as flickers while Photoshopping on your new mid-year MacBook Air, Apple’s got you covered. The tech giant reports that the patch addresses the aforementioned issues cropping up in “rare instances,” as well as a bug that causes audio levels to jump around during video playback. The software update — 1.0, if you’re interested in the details — is available from Apple Support in the links below.
Via: MacRumors
Source: Apple Support
Photographer Pelle Cass had a genius idea for his series Selected People: what if he took hundreds of pictures from the same location and then picked out people and animals from each of those pictures and combined them into a single image. It shows the random life of a single setting in one image.
Adobe’s shift to cloud-based software provision for its new Creative Cloud design suite
Adobe pulled the covers off its shiny new Creative Cloud earlier this month
Adobe releases latest Creative Cloud apps, surveys disgruntled customers about pricing
Posted in: Today's ChiliLove it or hate it, Adobe’s Creative Cloud subscription-based software is now the only way to get your favorite apps like Photoshop, Premiere Pro and the like. The company has just released the latest versions of most of those programs, now dubbed CC, which can be installed alongside the current apps for those afraid to change mid-project. Meanwhile, Adobe’s trying to tempt previous suite or apps owners to transition to the new system for up to 60 percent off for CS6 owners during a 12-month period, or 40 percent off for those on CS3 to CS5.5. According to Photo Rumors, Adobe is also considering a new pricing structure in response to a massive online backlash against the subscription model from existing clients, who feel it’s too expensive. The company sent out a survey asking some of them what they thought about paying $10 per month for three years for Photoshop, or $30 for the entire suite, while being able to keep a permanent CS6 copy of either at the end. Considering the level of vehemence we saw earlier, we’ll have to wait and see if that’ll fly. Meanwhile, check the PR after the break to see what’s new in all the apps.
Filed under: Software
Adobe’s Photoshop Express has been taking care of our botched photos on Android and iOS for quite some time, but it hasn’t had its turn on a desktop-class platform. That changes with today’s launch of a version for Windows 8 and RT. Like their mobile counterparts, Windows users can now make basic edits, apply filters and sync photos to Revel in a touch-friendly interface; the chief difference is the landscape-oriented Windows Store look. If you’ve wanted to use your Surface as a mobile photo workshop without paying for apps, you can grab Express for free at the source link.
Filed under: Tablets, Software
Source: Windows Store
In case you haven’t heard, a chapter in the history of Adobe’s venerated Photoshop (and other Creative Suite applications) has just snapped shut. That’s because all future versions have been moved to the Creative Cloud and renamed “CC,” meaning that the only way to grab anything after CS6 will be to sign up for an internet-only subscription. Now, many of Adobe’s customers for those apps (at least those who actually pony up for it) are pros who use it for paying gigs, and as Apple discovered with Final Cut Pro X, they’re a vocal bunch when they see any threat to their livelihoods. You may not be sure whether to get angry and look for an alternative (good luck with that), or to just go with the flow and regard the whole thing as inevitable. Luckily, we’ve been using the Creative Cloud since it came out and Creative Suite before that, so our rundown after the break should help you make up your mind.
Filed under: Software