Hi again guys!
I realised how different flash is compared to photoshop, in fact i found it extremely hard drawing this boat and it took me much longer than 4hours :-(
Any how upon submitting this activity i realised i set the stage at the wrong size and i found i didn't use layers as much as i could have and i felt somewhat intimidated after looking at Leeann Jones effort, man is that great.
Saturday, 30 July 2011
Monday, 25 July 2011
Hero shots - Digital Imaging Assessment
Hi guys,
yet another post, man there is some work involved in this course :-)
Anyhow i had some trouble identifying some of the font correctly, especially the heritage walk one where i matched it best as possible - this is what i find hardest at the moment identifying font families, anyone in that boat?
yet another post, man there is some work involved in this course :-)
Anyhow i had some trouble identifying some of the font correctly, especially the heritage walk one where i matched it best as possible - this is what i find hardest at the moment identifying font families, anyone in that boat?
Thursday, 21 July 2011
Tuesday, 12 July 2011
Sunday, 10 July 2011
Digital Imaging - Learning Activity 9
1. Find 3 examples where a background image has been used on a website. Take a screen grab of each, save them as .jpgs 50 quality 800px wide. Publish your favourite to your blog with a caption of why you like it.
2. Take your "tell-a-story-with-a-flatbed-scan" image and change it to make it into a web page background using Method (where the image receds into the background colour). Save it as a jpg 50 quality 930px wide.
3. Make a background for a web page using method 4 (1920px wide jpg, a few pixels tall, save as 100 quality). To test your image on a web page, download the Method4.zip folder, unzip the contents, locate and overwrite the bg.jpg file with your version then open the page in your browser.
Take a snapshot of your browser (PrtScrn on PC or on the Mac use the myriad of options) copy it into a new file in Photoshop, save as a jpg for your blog.
4. Make a seamless tile using method 5. Save as .jpg or .gif, whichever gives you the best quality for the lowest file size. To test your image on a web page, download this zip folder, unzip the contents, locate and overwrite the tilebg.jpg file with your version then open the page in your browser.
Take a snapshot of your browser (PrtScrn on PC or on the Mac use the myriad of options) copy it into a new file in Photoshop, save as a jpg for your blog.
I liked this one the best because its not over powering and doesn't take away the main focus of the site to much |
2. Take your "tell-a-story-with-a-flatbed-scan" image and change it to make it into a web page background using Method (where the image receds into the background colour). Save it as a jpg 50 quality 930px wide.
Just to let you guys know i would never ever use my flatbed scanned image on any website, it is absolutely horrible, its just portraying method 2, cheers :-) |
3. Make a background for a web page using method 4 (1920px wide jpg, a few pixels tall, save as 100 quality). To test your image on a web page, download the Method4.zip folder, unzip the contents, locate and overwrite the bg.jpg file with your version then open the page in your browser.
Take a snapshot of your browser (PrtScrn on PC or on the Mac use the myriad of options) copy it into a new file in Photoshop, save as a jpg for your blog.
4. Make a seamless tile using method 5. Save as .jpg or .gif, whichever gives you the best quality for the lowest file size. To test your image on a web page, download this zip folder, unzip the contents, locate and overwrite the tilebg.jpg file with your version then open the page in your browser.
Take a snapshot of your browser (PrtScrn on PC or on the Mac use the myriad of options) copy it into a new file in Photoshop, save as a jpg for your blog.
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