Third and final part of the tutorial where you will see how to create a free subdomain and host your website.
Web Hosting: Uploading and Hosting Part 3 from Paper Bird on Vimeo.
Sunday, November 4, 2012
Saturday, November 3, 2012
Tutorial: Hosting a Website: Part 2
Second part of the tutorial where I will be showing you how to edit the html files and add hyperlinks on to them before uploading it on the internet.
Part 2: Editing the HTML file
Web Hosting: Creating Hyperlinks using an HTML Editor Part 2 from Paper Bird on Vimeo.
Part 2: Editing the HTML file
Web Hosting: Creating Hyperlinks using an HTML Editor Part 2 from Paper Bird on Vimeo.
Friday, October 26, 2012
Tutorial: Hosting a website: Part 1
A simple tutorial on Splicing and Saving as HTML out of photoshop. This 3 part tutorial series will show you how to create a website, how to customize it and how to upload it on a hosting platform.
Part 1: Splicing and Saving as HTML
Part 1: Splicing and Saving as HTML
Host a Website: Splicing and Saving as HTML from Photoshop Part 1 from Paper Bird on Vimeo.
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Monday, July 16, 2012
Sunday, July 1, 2012
Friday, June 29, 2012
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
Thursday, March 8, 2012
Making the Ghost Rider
Here is the behind the scene breakdown of the image 'The Ghost Rider".
I shot the image of the toy (which btw is an in-house product I bought from the Hershey's store at Changi Airport.) with a 50mm Prime mounted on a Canon 5D Mark II. I tried framing the composition in a way to get the shallowest Depth Of Field (DOF) possible.
This is what I got.
Took the image to Photoshop CS5. I wanted to darken the bright Cyan tint on the surface before desaturating the whole image, So I used the hue/saturation window to single out and bring down the lightness on the Cyan channel.
Bring down the lightness of the Cyans.
Then I applied a Black & White preset to the whole image. And chose Yellow Filter from the Drop-down menu.
Black and White with Yellow Filter applied.
It was time to bring in the fire! I did my research and took a screenshot of some decent looking fire from a video. Played with the brightness and contrast of the image to make everything except the fire, black.
Bring up the contrast to make the fire standout.
I added the fire layer over our hershey's truck.Scaled it down, reduced the opacity and used the distort modifier to align the fire to the truck's surface.
Align the fire to the hood using Distort Modifier.
When I settled on a position, I brought back the fire layer's opacity and changed the blending mode to Screen.
Change the layer blending mode to Screen.
Things were already starting to look good but I was not finished. The fire looked so light and thus a little unreal on the surface. I added a new layer in between the background and the fire layer. Picked up a brush, dipped it in some black and painted under the fire.
Painting under the fire layer with black.
Finally, I did use the eraser tool to take out the fire where there is no surface.
Erasing and Fine-tuning the fire.
And that was it! Wish I had known this technique back in the 90s- I wouldn't have lost 30 of my G.I.Joe action figures! :(
Saturday, February 25, 2012
Saturday, February 4, 2012
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