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Photoshopping and the Media – A Conversation with a High School Freshman

May 11, 2012 in Freelancing, Graphic Design, Interviews, Photography, Photoshop

Back in early April, I was approached by a high school freshman who was working on a paper about the role of Photoshop and photo manipulation in the media – both news and otherwise – and how that affects self-image in young people. I was, of course, glad to help out and below is how I responded to her questions about my views on the subject and how I make my own decisions with regards to Photoshop and image retouching. It’s kind of a stream of consciousness and could certainly be expanded upon, so please bear with my jumping around.

If you have any comments, please share them in the comments below!

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Making a Comeback

May 9, 2012 in Freelancing, Graphic Design Podcast, News, Personal, Web Design, Web Design Podcast

My apologies for the extended absence. It seems like the past two years have been a real struggle to keep the blog portion of the site going as I have been devoting my time – where I rightly should – to my family and as I continue the adjustment to my new job.

For those that might still have me in their news feeds or bookmarks and actually stop by from time to time, just after Thanksgiving I started work as the Outreach & Web Assistant at the Cornell Center for Technology Enterprise & Commercialization (CCTEC) at Cornell University. Basically, I’m the webmaster, social media guy, and a support person for the Outreach group in our office. We are the technology transfer office for the university, securing patents for inventions developed by faculty, staff, and students that belong to Cornell and then either licensing those inventions to outside companies or starting companies based on those technologies. Five months in and I’m feeling pretty good about my position. There is still a lot to be learned but it’s a most welcome change from where I was until early January 2011.

With my one-hour commute each way to Ithaca every day, dinner and play time with a two-year-old, and then a couple of hours with my wife before an earlier bedtime than I had been used to, something had to be put on the back burner and the blog was it.

I’ve also put Graphic Talk Radio on hiatus for the time being. I had recorded a number of episodes at once and then had a full schedule through November and December but I haven’t had the chance to record more. I definitely want to return tot he show. It’s been a lot of fun for me and the response I’ve gotten from listeners has been great. I may even start recording shows from my car during my commute, we’ll see.

All of a sudden, projects have been coming in on the freelance side. I am in the middle of a large product photo editing project for an online pharmaceutical distributor in the UK – basically taking their product shots off the background and watermarking them. And they have another large chunk of files waiting in the wings for me after this round is complete.

A writer living in Cape Town, South Africa has a new screenplay she’s going to start shopping around and she is going to have me design a website and some marketing materials for her so she can show it off to potential studios. I’m very excited about this one because the sketches I’ve seen of the design look great and offer a lot of different possibilities.

And even today, I’ve gotten a pair of contacts about photo manipulation projects that might pan out. So, things are starting to move along in positive directions.

I can’t make any promises but I hope to get back into a regular routine of blogging soon, even if it’s with shorter posts only a few times a week. It’s been a labor of love these past (almost) 10  years that I’ve been writing online and I want to keep it going if I can.

So, if you have any ideas for what you would like me to post about or ideas for Graphic Talk Radio episodes, please let me know! In the meantime, I have a post in mind for Friday that might be interesting if you want to stop back and give it a read.

Workflow Friday: Joey L

February 6, 2009 in Inspiration, Photography, Photoshop, Tutorials, Workflow

Photoshop Workflows

This week we welcome an amazing photographer to join our series, Joey Lawrence, who might be better known to many of you as Joey L. I first met Joey back in the spring of 2007 and was immediate taken by the quality of his photography, the spirit with which he approached life, and his perspective on the world around him at even such a young age.

Joey just returned from an awesome trip to Africa and today he is going to walk us through how he processed one of his shots from that experience, “Vicious Dog.” If you would like to learn more about Joey L, the subject of this photo, or his adventure, you can find more information in his P&P Blogger Profile, his guest post from this week on Friend-of-the-Blog Scott Kelby’s Photoshop Insider, and on JoeyL.com.

But for now let’s sit back, relax, and enjoy some great photography, some insight, and inspiration from an exceptional young man!

To me, Photoshop is simply a tool that should be fully molded to suit the users taste in editing. No matter what kind of image you are editing or how much work you are going to put into it, you’ll find there are several ways to do the exact same thing. I like to work as simply as possible and treat the image as if it were real right in front of me, and CS3 is made up of just raw tools around me… If one adjustment is done, it can bring one look, but one area must be compensated with another adjustment… Which must be compensated with another, and so on. It’s like a doctor proscribing a patient many medicines to eventually balance each other out. To overcome these many steps, the most important thing to learn is not Photoshop instructions, anyone can learn those… The most important thing is to develop an insight into foreseeing how your image should be, this way you see past the individual steps and vision the final outcome of the image.

I’ve been questioned many times on my methods in my own tutorials for sale, which some say are destructive to an image. Although I have learned some new techniques to protect the pixels in the image and apply them in my workflow now, (and agree this is crucial when printing a file), my answer is the same… Who cares! Yes, it is very important to understand the principles of Photoshop and know it’s limits in an image, but this knowledge should be set at the back of your head as instinct so creative thoughts are not completely dissolved in book knowledge. I admit, I first learned Photoshop just by clicking around and experimenting. This did lead to many mistakes that I know now not to do, but it did raise some interesting patterns in the way I edit. My first training was not formal, and a lot of the things I do today are based on those first years I was playing around. Just look at an image as it is, an image. The technicalities are important and should be engraved into your skull, but they are not the image and the end result.

Here is a simple technique that was not in my editing DVD that I do a lot lately to much of my newer work.

Step 1
Always edit in the wee hours in the morning. There’s nobody there to bother you.

I am converting the RAW file in Phase One’s capture software. The image itself was taken with a P45+ back and a prime 80 mm lens.

I know a lot of people pump out their RAW files first with a very flattened exposure and adjust it with more precision in photoshop… But usually I know exactly where I want an image to end up, and don’t mind just boosting the contrast and turning down the saturation a bit right in the RAW converter.

Jason D. Moore's Photoshop Workflow with Joey L - Step 1

Step 2
Properly sharpening RAW files before output is very important. If you plan to do it later, you are missing out on manipulating the root of the file… And the results will be very poor. I find a point in the photo where the depth of field trails off, and focus on the sharpest point near it. It takes a lot of practice to figure out the right degree of sharpness for a print. Usually the rule of thumb I use is to just feel it out by eye, and make the image a little bit too sharp for your monitor. This way on the page, the fine details are preserved. Make sure to avoid sharpening halos.

Jason D. Moore's Photoshop Workflow with Joey L - Step 2

Step 3
I now have my image converted from RAW and in Photoshop CS3. To me, the tonal range on my subject seems too flat. It is not really a matter of contrast that I didn’t add in the converter, but a lack in the tonal values themselves. I want a harsher, grittier tonal range.

 Jason D. Moore's Photoshop Workflow with Joey L - Step 3

Step 4
How I get this is to first duplicate the background layer, then select Channel Mixer. Within the channel mixer, I can make a black and white image that looks much different than just simply using the command “desaturate.” I can mix all the channels of blue, green and red to come up with something. Usually, the pure “blue filter” preset works great, and I have used it on this particular image.

Jason D. Moore's Photoshop Workflow with Joey L - Step 4

Step 5
Doing this kind of black and white conversion has now enabled me to have some thick tones, the only problem is now the image is not color. To move on, I slide down the opacity slider until it looks good. Usually I like slightly muted, muddy tones. A opacity of 32% has seemed to work.

Jason D. Moore's Photoshop Workflow with Joey L - Step 5

Step 6
Just to show you the difference of the channels, check out what happens when I use purely the red channel instead of the blue channel. I get very even and soft tones versus the harsh and contrasted.

Jason D. Moore's Photoshop Workflow with Joey L - Step 6

Step 7
I had to convert to black and white for the technique to work, but now I’ve lost some of the coloring that was initially in the image. I want to gain this back, but also add a contrast boost. I do this by duplicating the colored background layer again, and dragging it on top of the image. Then I set it’s blending mode to “Soft light” and drag the opacity around until it looks good. 28% seemed to work.

Jason D. Moore's Photoshop Workflow with Joey L - Step 7

Step 8
Now I have noticed because of my last manipulation, I have lost a lot of detail in the shadows. I correct this by doing a simple Shadow/Highlights adjustment.

Jason D. Moore's Photoshop Workflow with Joey L - Step 8

Step 9
I tweak the colors in selective color to fine tune everything in the image and achieve the perfect skin tone.

Jason D. Moore's Photoshop Workflow with Joey L - Step 9

Step 10
Turn off your embarrassing music and go to bed.

Jason D. Moore's Photoshop Workflow with Joey L - Step 10

Thanks Joey!  Check out more from Joey L. by visiting http://tutorial.joeyL.com.

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May 11, 2005

May 11, 2005 in Personal

It’s been a while since I’ve written here, I know, but it’s not like there’s been nothing to write about. It’s a busy time of year with work and I’ve been spending a lot of time with projects and events that leave me too tired to write a lot of the time. Also, I don’t want to repeat a lot of the same things I’ve said over and over again..

Lately, the feelings I had about a year and a half ago are creeping back in. I look at my life and the things I’m involved in and the routines I have and I get the feeling that I may be single indefinitely. It’s a hard thought to have and, let me tell you, it doesn’t tickle. As much as I hate it, it could very well be true and I have to come to terms with that. Even if it’s only for a few more years I need to accept it and move on with my life. I need to live to the fullest regardless of the box I check on forms. I was talking to someone about a year or so ago about how I felt as though I would like to have my own house in a few years (I said something like 3 years, then, but I’m thinking now that it would be more like 5). She was taken aback by the thought of it. “How could you do that if you haven’t even met anyone yet?” was her general response. I’ve also talked to people who thought it odd that I would go to the movies alone or how depressing it was that I would travel by myself. The response I give is the same: I need to do things that make me happy and give my life some meaning and fulfillment and I think it’s even more important to do those things as a single person so that my life is more than just… bearable.

As I was writing in my personal journal the other day – also becoming more of the exception rather than the rule – I was noting how it feels as though I am starting a new chapter in my life; I am getting a fresh start. I have been struggling with some personal religious issues over the past months and have recently elected to step down from coordinating the young adult ministry group, which also removes me from the Conference Council. So, I’m relieved from some stress and demands of my time. It’s so easy for someone of my age to be tempted to fill up every possible free day with something to do. I mean, I’m young and single so I have the time and energy to commit to groups and programs and extra work. But that’s how you get burned out, isn’t it? So, I cut out some of the things that drew me closer to burn out. And, though I hate to say it, the struggles I’ve been having with my religious life have made it all the more easy to step away from some of those things. Work is another story. I really enjoy what I do. The combination of being allowed to be creative and the challenge of getting it ‘right’ have given me a sense of accomplishment that I don’t feel elsewhere.

Another thing I wrote about was how I really wish I had someone/thing to come home to at the end of the day. Because I live alone the quietness and solitude of the apartment – while appreciated and certainly needed at times – can get to me sometimes. Some of the only excitement I get from going home is to relax and watch TV. It’s more of an escape from everything than anything else. It’s more like I place connected with running away from rather than running towards. I will be moving this summer to get a change in scenery and also to get a dog. I’ve always loved dogs and I could really use the regular companionship in my life. Hopefully it will be enough to make me feel happier in my daily life rather than what I feel now. It’s not so much depression as it is uninspiration. As a little-known poet once wrote,

“Oh, to be inspired again
And live my life entire
Without regret or want or need
And others I’d inspire.”

March 23, 2003

March 23, 2003 in Personal

I’m in a strange place in my life right now. The semester, and by extension college, is almost complete for me. Only 5 weeks of classes left before it’s all over. On the one hand, I’ll be sad to go because it means saying goodbye to all those I’ve met and gotten close to over the past few years. But on the other hand, I’m excited to take on what’s next, to have my own place, to be doing something I enjoy and to be able to spend more time with my ever-growing nephew, Garrett. Certainly, the good outweighs the bad – and shouldn’t it always be that way?

In a lot of ways even the sad parts aren’t going to be as negative as I might think. For one thing, I’m definitely going to keep in touch with my closest friends and I’m still going to be close enough to visit. So that’s not too bad. Another thing, not so pleasant, is that I don’t feel as close or connected with people as I once did, which, unfortunately, will make it easier to say goodbye. Over the past year, really since I started preparing to go abroad, I’ve felt people begin to slip away from me. Friends I held dear seemed to slowly back out of my life until they were all but gone. I saw them less, spoke with them less frequently, and basically just lost any feeling of closeness that, I thought, once was there. And, now that I’ve returned, the sense I get is that they know we only have so long left so why bother trying too hard?

Perhaps I was never quite as close to my friends as I thought, or, at least, they were never as close to me… As I’ve said before, it takes a lot for me to trust people, to let down my guard, to open up; but once someone has gained my trust, it can be very hard to lose it. I think because trust is such a major thing with me, it carries with it an awful lot of other things as well. When friends have reached a certain level for me, as most of them have here, I hold a lot of stock in those friendships. I place a lot of meaning in my relationships with others, perhaps more than they do in their relationships with me…

The title of friend is not one given to just anyone in my life. Those who I would call my friends hold a special place in my heart, a place that is just for them. I do my best to show them that I love them and their presence in my life is a blessing and is something that I hold dear. But sometimes they just don’t see. I just wish that somehow, someday they might realize just how much they mean to me. And, though I don’t say it for simpathy or for guilt, I hope that I mean enough to them that they might show me their love and friendship in ways that I might better see it…

January 28, 2003

January 28, 2003 in Personal

It takes me a long time to be willing to share of myself with others. Even longer to share some of the goings on of my heart and mind. You see, I’m very introverted and tend to be shy and keep to myself until I feel comfortable around people. Even then, it isn’t that much. I tend to sit back and watch. I’d wait and see what the environment is like and then decide whether or not I’d like to interact with it, and then, how much. Trust is a big thing with me. It always has been.

Growing up I moved around a lot. Looking back, the average that I’ve lived in one place is three years.Most, if not all, of the moves required the transfer of schools. I was always the new kid; hopping from school to school every few years into systems of friends who had been together for years and I was never quite sure where I fit in. If I was lucky enough to find a group of friends to hang out with and goof around with – and I usually did without too much trouble, though it would take awhile – they weren’t the kinds of friends I wanted or felt I needed. Most were guys that liked to cut up and act silly and test out new jokes – both good and bad – in a group where their eccentricities weren’t ridiculed by the “cooler” crowd. Instead of trying to fit in with what was “in” at the time, we tended to stick together and not care about all of that. We didn’t have to worry about fitting in with each other because we accepted each other for who we were. So, in a sense, we fit in because we didn’t fit in.

Though these types of friends were a lot of fun they would be lacking in a serious side. Their level of maturity left much to be desired. You see, while I was, and am, able to make jokes with the best of them – and at the risk of sounding immodest, I was one of the best of them – I always felt that I needed to be more ME. While I am that fun-loving jokester that loves to come up with puns and other funny turns of phrase, it is a mask that I wear. I get that way on two types of occasions: (1) when I feel like I need to do something to get people to like me – after all, laughing brings people together; and (2) when I’m finally comfortable letting loose with people. The former tended to be the more true during much of my pre-college years. Kids can be so cruel, and I was well aware of just how real that statement can be. Shy redheads who wear glasses, are liked by teachers for being good students, and sing in the school chorus aren’t among the most accepted of kids in school, let alone popular. Wherever I turned, that fact was made all the more clear to me. So, in attempts to befriend my schoolmates, I would joke around and try to show people that I was worth noticing too – and not in a way that attracted the put-downs and names that are prevalent in the schoolyard. For the most part it worked. Though I still got called the occassional name I quickly learned that it was more important to just blow it off and go on my way, paying more attention to the laughs of my friends that joined mine rather than were directed at me by those who were “cooler.”

But, while the joking around yielded some great friends, I wanted more. I wanted friends I could be myself with, both good and bad and everything in between. I couldn’t seem to find that at school – friendships there are so superficial sometimes anyway. I discovered the fellowship groups at the various churches I attended and saw how they would accept me despite my flaws. I was quickly put at ease and could be myself and the real ME would emerge. When I would move I sought out these groups, knowing full well that I would be able to quickly find refuge in them. From there, I made friends that last until today, and I am forever grateful for that.

It finally came time to go on to college. I said goodbyes to all of my friends and headed off on the next great adventure of my life. Because many of the friends I had in high school were of the first type – those that were often just as strange as I – it was pretty easy to let go and move on. Upon my arrival on campus I quickly joined in with the campus ministries group and soon found myself smack dab in the middle of a group of people that loved me and accepted me just because. And I must say, they are all treasured friends to this day. It was in one of these groups that I learned the joys of being able to share myself with others. The main focus of this one particular group is to sit down and talk about everything that is going on in your life. We’d read from our journals and keep track of the various struggles we were dealing with. It was a confidential group where there was never fear of being laughed at or being embarrassed. We were all there because we needed each other and wanted to be there for each other. We were more family than anything else. I learned how to trust there.

And so, despite the struggles of growing up, ever the new kid in town, I was able to learn how to be ME and to be open about who I am as a person without fear and without reservation. It was the strength and confidence learned from these friends that allow me to write these words today. And I don’t know where I would be without them.