Intermediate Photoshop CS4
Are you ready to take your Photoshop skills to the next level?
Then join us and learn advanced techniques for using Adobe
Photoshop CS4 to edit your images and photos. Imagine being able to
undo or revise changes you've already made without losing image
quality or needing to start over! If you've already mastered
Photoshop's basic tools and commands, you'll find it easy to master
the nondestructive editing techniques we'll cover.
You'll discover how to save every pixel in your original image so
you never have to say "I'm sorry I tossed that information." You'll
see how to the use Smart Objects so you can crop an image or resize
it and get it back to its original size month…
There are no frequently asked questions yet. If you have any more questions or need help, contact our customer service.
Are you ready to take your Photoshop skills to the next level?
Then join us and learn advanced techniques for using Adobe
Photoshop CS4 to edit your images and photos. Imagine being able to
undo or revise changes you've already made without losing image
quality or needing to start over! If you've already mastered
Photoshop's basic tools and commands, you'll find it easy to master
the nondestructive editing techniques we'll cover.
You'll discover how to save every pixel in your original image so
you never have to say "I'm sorry I tossed that information." You'll
see how to the use Smart Objects so you can crop an image or resize
it and get it back to its original size months later. You'll master
tricks for warping Smart Objects that will make the tabloid
newspapers jealous! And you'll learn how to make adjustments to
your images that you can tweak at any time to add shadows or
embossing.
Whether you want to use Photoshop to edit photos, make scrapbook
pages, or do original artwork, you'll find this course gives you
the skills you need. So get ready to take a giant leap forward in
your Photoshop creativity and productivity!
This course includes a knowledgeable and caring instructor who will guide you through your lessons, facilitate discussions, and answer your questions. The instructor for this course will be Sherry London.
SyllabusA new section of each course starts monthly. If enrolling in a series of two or more courses, please be sure to space the start date for each course at least two months apart.
Week 1
Wednesday - Lesson 01In this opening lesson, you'll find out what layers are and how to work with the Layers panel to create, view, or hide them. After you've learned how to do basic editing in Photoshop, the most critical skill you can learn is how to use layers because editing your image in layers opens a whole new world of opportunities for fine-tuning your images whenever you wish. Unlike single-layer images, a layered image can be edited nondestructively at any point, so you don't have to start over again if you've made a mistake or need to change something.
Friday - Lesson 02Today we'll focus on understanding the clues Photoshop gives you that explain exactly what you're doing to a layer as you're working. Along the way, you'll see how you can use layers to make an area of a photo pop out from the photo itself. This is a technique called screening back an image, and it's a treatment that you're sure to enjoy using .
Week 2
Wednesday - Lesson 03In this lesson, you learn how to take advantage of Smart Objects—the most awesome and significant innovation in Photoshop since the layers feature was introduced. One of the most exciting things you can do with a Smart Object is place a RAW-format photo (or JPG or TIF) file inside the Smart Object so you can re-edit it in Camera RAW any time you want. You'll discover how to crop and resize photos nondestructively using Smart Objects, and you'll love the way Smart Objects let you make a protected package out of an image.
Friday - Lesson 04Today you'll see how you can make an individual layer in an image larger or smaller, rotate it, or use the incredible Warp command. All of these changes can be reversed if you make them on a Smart Object layer—you can change your mind as often as you need and anytime you want. You can use filters nondestructively so long as you apply them to a Smart Object (gee, those Smart Objects come in handy!). You'll also learn to create a pear that, when cut open, reveals a new fruit—the pearange (a pear with an orange inside of it).
Week 3
Wednesday - Lesson 05If you use the Levels command to alter the values in an image and then decide a week later that you made the image too dark, you're stuck. Each time you edit the Levels in an image, you lose image quality. But what if there was a way to edit the Levels as much as want and not hurt the image quality at all? There is: the feature is called Adjustment Layers, and you'll discover it today. An adjustment layer makes no permanent change to the image, and you can stack them up as you wish. It's more nondestructive editing, but it's a technique that I guarantee you'll wish you'd learned earlier. You won't ever want to apply a regular Levels command to an image again.
Friday - Lesson 06In this lesson, you'll find out about layer masks—another way that Photoshop lets you have your cake and eat it too. If you bring a picture of little Johnny onto a new background image, and you erase all the stuff that was in Johnny's original background, what happens if you later decide you just have to have that red ball you got rid of a week ago? You'd better hope you have the original image around somewhere, and then you're in for a lot more work again. However, if you use a layer mask, you'll keep every pixel that's in the original image and hide the parts of the original that you no longer wish to see. If you change your mind about what you need to see, it's as easy as painting over some black pixels in the layer mask with white paint. You can change your mind as often as you want.
Week 4
Wednesday - Lesson 07Today you'll get a chance to use what you've learned about masks in a real project. It's modeled after work that I did on a series of children's reading books. In the process, you'll also learn to use Photoshop's new Masks panel, which makes working with masks easy. You'll upgrade your use of masks to be able to paint areas of the mask to hide or show them and to alter the opacity (called the density in Photoshop-speak) of the mask. Finally, you'll composite three images together using layer masks.
Friday - Lesson 08Did the dog eat grandmother's portrait? Or did time and water do that damage? No matter. Using layers makes it easier than ever before to restore some of your treasured family heritage. You'll get ample practice on that today plus links to other sites on the Web that specialize in image restorations. Again, the theme of this lesson is nondestructive editing—working in layers so that you can always change your mind about a correction without having to begin again.
Week 5
Wednesday - Lesson 09What happens if you want to place a person into a swimming pool or the ocean using Photoshop? Water is partially transparent, and to make the composite realistic, you need to be able to slowly transition from total opacity above the water line to total transparency below it. That's one of the skills you'll learn in this lesson as you work with grayscale and gradient masks.
Friday - Lesson 10Photoshop has some special layers that let you create patterns, gradients, or solid colors and change them easily, any time you want. Today you'll see how easy it is to alter the look of a complex border or change composites. You'll also learn some excellent techniques to create seamless patterns, which is something that many students really enjoy.
Week 6
Wednesday - Lesson 11Have you ever wondered how to put images inside of type, like those old postcards for various cities? You'll find out today. It's called a clipping mask, and it's a digital version of spreading glitter onto a paper that has a design drawn in glue—the glitter only sticks to the glue. In this case, the new layers only stick to the base layer in the clipping mask. It's really easy, but it provides one of Photoshop's "wow" moments.
Friday - Lesson 12Do you like the look of double-exposed images? Would you enjoy creating a seamless composite of your vacation images? Then this is your lesson! It's one of my favorites in the whole course. Up to now, you've masked images so that you can either see the image in the layer or not, or you've used a gradient or paint in the mask to get a grayscale transition. Now you'll use photos in the mask to get a hide-and-seek look to layer visibility. You'll also learn how to create an image that has a different photo in each color channel. Then you'll finish the course with a fun assignment that lets you put together everything you've learned.
Requirements
Adobe Photoshop CS4 for Windows or
Adobe Photoshop CS4 for Macintosh (software must
be installed and fully operational before the course begins); It
can be part of the Creative Suite in Standard or Extended editions
or it can be a standalone version of either Standard or Extended.
No features from the Extended version will be taught, however. On
the PC platform, either Windows XP or Vista is acceptable. You can
also take this course with Mac OS X 10.4 or 10.5 on either the
PowerPC or Intel Mac platform.
Internet access, e-mail, the Microsoft Internet Explorer or Mozilla
Firefox Web browser, and the Adobe Flash and PDF plug-ins (two free
and simple downloads you obtain at http://www.adobe.com/downloads
by clicking Get Adobe Flash Player and Get Adobe Reader).
You need to have completed Introduction to Photoshop CS2, CS3, or
CS4. If you have not taken one of these courses, you need to have a
good working knowledge of the basic tools in Photoshop and be able
to make selections, use the Clone Stamp tool and Healing brushes,
and do elementary color correction.
In addition, you will need to have a program that extracts the
example files from the Zip file provided with each lesson. You need
to know how to create a new file folder and locate files on your
hard drive.
If you wish to share your work with the instructor, you will need
an online album in which to display your work. Instructions for
this will provided in the first lesson.
There are no frequently asked questions yet. If you have any more questions or need help, contact our customer service.
