Showing posts with label Balancing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Balancing. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Balancing Work and Life as a Creative Professional

Recently, The 99 Percent, a research arm and think tank of Behance, ran a terrific blog post about balancing work and life as a creative professional.

The blog post displays an excerpt from Lewis Hyde’s book, The Gift: Creativity and the Artist in the Modern World, where he describes work as what we do by the hour – for money, if possible. Hyde then differentiates creative labor as something that is harder to quantify – something that has its own schedule and may take longer, such as writing a poem, or creating a painting.

Creative professionals recognize that there is some overlap here, and that the two can often be easily confused. Creatives might try to rush a creative process in the name of work, or work diligently and tirelessly through a long process that required breaks from mental stress and ware for the sake of creativity.

Above all, the two can also easily get mixed up with personal life. It’s easy to get absorbed by a creative task that one wants to complete, while losing track of the direction of one’s life.

Nigel Marsh had an insightful TED talk on this topic last year, which remains relevant to this day. Watch this talk, and then let us know how you plan to balance work, creative labor and life.


View the original article here

Sunday, May 22, 2011

How contrast balancing using Photoshop


Contrast masking is a compression method of the range of brightness and obtaining good detail in highlights and shadows. The result is comparable to a HDR processing, but uses a single image and covers a range of more limited brightness. If the shadow or highlight detail is not available in the original image, it cannot be emphasized with this method. In this case, true HDR, with multiple images shot in various exhibitions, may be necessary.

This process will work in most photo editors, other than Photoshop, with variations in menus and controls. This tutorial provides general guidance for each step, followed by the specific directions of click of the mouse for Photoshop. Directions of click of the mouse may not exactly the same for your version of Photoshop.

Step 1. Duplicate the layer.

Layer - > double layer

Step 2 Desaturate the layer that you just created.

Improve - > adjust color - > remove color (Ctrl + Shift + U)

Desaturating removes colors - the result should look like a black and white photo.

Step 3 Invert the layer that you just created.

Image - > adjustments - > reverse

You should now have what looks like a negative black and white image.

Step 4 The new value Overlay layer blending mode (mode soft light works as well for photos.) (Some of the other modes to try if you want a more artificial effect).

Use the drop-down list in the layers window

Step 5 Applies a Gaussian blur, adjust the RADIUS until it looks as you want.

Filter - > blur - > Gaussian blur

Step 6 Adjust the opacity of the layer until it looks good.

Use the slider at the top of the window layers








Free contrast masking plug-in for Photoshop is available at: http://www.photo-plugins.com

Get all the photography information you need at the Brooks Photopedia: http://www.brooksphotopedia.com