
Hyperbole and a Half The Lounge: Cute, Sexy, and Purrific! How To Make Digital Photos Look Like Lomo Photography The following tip on getting digital images to look like Lomo Images was submitted by DPS reader – Frank Lazaro. You can see his photography at his Flickr page and see some of his Lomo shots here. From the first time I saw a photo that looked like this, I wanted to shoot one of my own. Low and behold I went out and bought 2 of these babies. I searched and searched and after trying several different Photoshop methods, I finally came up with my own using a mix of different techniques. Get Free Weekly Digital Camera Tips via Email Here is my step by step on how I take a digital photo and make it Lomoified. Getting Started – Creating a Vignette The first thing you want to do is create the classic vignette that the Lomos are well known for and I achieve this by doing a freehand lasso of a circle around the photo. Once you have set the feather (shown above) and have drawn the circle, you must invert the selection. Now to achieve the vignette, I add a Levels layer. Now you have a vignette.
theWAREHOUSE web comic Now that I've had a chance to catch up a bit, here's a "real" Monday comic. I hope this doesn't come across as a rant or a whine, just an explanation. I've interestingly been getting a lot of mail lately referencing Cyanide and Happiness. That's fine. But theWAREHOUSE is not in competition with them. First, we are in different genres. Second, and this is important: they have a stable of five guys doing the comics. theWAREHOUSE is, well, me. Those of you great folks who are just concerned about theWAREHOUSE, regardless of other sites out there, I am sorry when I slack on updates. theWAREHOUSE has been one of the most faithfully updated webcomics I've seen. Thanks for taking the time to read and understand.
Flipside TANDEM FILMS - London UK Animation Studio QC: New Comics Every Monday Through Friday Sarah and the Seed Typography Summer School 2017 | Typography Summer School 2017 Girls With Slingshots "Our Bloodstained Roof" ShareThis Copy and Paste Lisa Evans - Illustrator Photoshop vintage effect Back in October I took this photo, in front of our house. A cool scene, bright colors and a double rainbow. After seeing this picture on my Flickr page, I received an e-mail from Marco who asked me about the post process of this image. Now here is my answer… Choose your image carefully First of all I need to mention that some pictures are better suitable than others. Add contrast and saturation Place the image in a separate layer. Adjust curves Add another adjustement layer. Select Green from the Channel dropdown menu and adjust the curve as shown in the image above. Now select Blue from the Channel dropdown menu and adjust the curve as shown in the image above. Add Vignette effect Select the layer with your photo and go to the Filter menu and select "Convert for Smart Filters". Now go to the Filter menu and select Distort > Lens Correction. Add some Colorisation Your photo should look pretty dramatic right now with a lot of contrast. The final touch Before and after Here is another example: