Tuesday 23 February 2016

Presentation

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1xr46TzoCvqBCXJ9c5yhGFfV0g2Y_edbldJqi3dP7p7A/edit?usp=sharing

No touchy!

Pixel Explosion Effect in Photoshop

This video teaches how to make a pixelated explosion effect in Photoshop. In the process, it gives information about using masks to show pieces of an image, using shadow effects, and a type of brush that paints in unusual ways. With all these features together it created the effect, so it feels like instead it gave me a better understanding of multiple options.

The creator of this video did a great job of teaching how to incorporate the effect into artwork, but since this specific effect can be used in so many different ways that weren't explored, I think that reading or watching a tutorial about what one can do with brushes would give a lot more valuable information.

I personally don't see myself using this effect very much in the future, but it would be great for an album cover because it's alluring and surreal.

Monday 22 February 2016

Masks & Blending Modes Used

Title: Combines;Gate
The image that you see above includes a Professor of Physics at the University of Nottingham, Philip Moriarty. I placed an image of him in front of a lovely Green Tea background and a metal gate, then I used a mask to hide Moriarty's real background to show the tea background & selected the Multiply blending mode on the tea background in order to faintly show the metal gate.

I call this Combines;Gate because it merges a gate with tea, and there's a great time-travel anime called Steins;Gate.

Monday 8 February 2016

Pixel Portrait

Wilson Joseph Pixel Portrait GIF

Wilson Joseph Pixel Portrait PNG
Format-Comparison


I don't notice a difference when enlarging and comparing the GIF and PNG image formats. The only difference that I learned about them is that PNG can carry many, many more combinations of colours than GIF, and therefore frequently has to encode the information into a slightly less compressed format.



Features

When making this image, I was trying to emphasize the curving of my hair. I did this by making boomerang type lines, where the lines are thicker in the middle and fade out on either end. I was trying to make myself look formal and proper, so I darkened or lightened lines that head in the same direction to make it seem orderly. Another addition to formality was my use of grayer colours, such as bronze, light-silver/beige, and dirty-blue. I recently learned that gray is a neutral colour, and thought that it would be a good fit for coming across as solemn.


Procedure

I made this through Photoshop CS5, as a 100x150 px image with RGB colour and 72 dpi. I first took a reference image, shrunk it, and put it on the bottom layer, then I put an adjustment layer over it to lower the opacity of the reference to be able to differentiate between the original and the new. Then I had another copy of the reference of to the side in order to copy the original colours. The rest was making new layers for different parts of the image, putting down main colours, and shading what needs to be shaded.

Chinese WaterColour Painting

Flower & Bird Painting


Flower & Bird painting reference
 Flower and Bird painting style was introduced in the Tang Dynasty around the 9th century. They frequently include branches, flowers, birds, fish, insects, cats, and really focus on natural scenes. The brushes used to make these paintings are similar to the brushes used for calligraphy, as they both have a fine tip and a broad back for brushes. Additionally, empty space is often used in these paintings to create balance, and many curved or faded lines are used for plant life. The background of the art is traditionally a steel-brown colour by virtue of the style over-using the colour.










Four Seasons Painting


Four Seasons painting reference
The four seasons paintings, sometimes called "four gentlemen" are represented by four plants: Plum Blossom for winter, orchid for spring, bamboo for summer and chrysanthemum for autumn. Each plant combined with their season represent another meaning. Many of these artworks instead use one type of plant and have it shown in all four seasons, or sometimes include underlying colours that are widely used in each season.