Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Multimedia Journalism Multimedia Journalism Digital Photography Making things better with Photoshop Sec. C1 – Feb 23, 2009.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Multimedia Journalism Multimedia Journalism Digital Photography Making things better with Photoshop Sec. C1 – Feb 23, 2009."— Presentation transcript:

1 Multimedia Journalism Multimedia Journalism Digital Photography Making things better with Photoshop Sec. C1 – Feb 23, 2009

2 Topics we’ll cover today Your picture stories (comments, critiques) Adobe Photoshop – The basics – In-class demonstrations and assignments: The only way to really learn most software is to play with it yourself. Useful links and information Assignments for next time

3 Picture Stories How does your piece meet the criteria of a picture story? What basic rules of composition did you try to follow? Was there anything you would have changed or done differently?

4 Photoshop Basics In this class, we will go over the use of some tools and actions, as well as image sizes, saving files, etc. Photoshop, like any powerful piece of software, can become very complicated very quickly. Allow this site to become your friend: – http://www.adobe.com/support/photoshop http://www.adobe.com/support/photoshop Here you’ll find help files, FAQs, text and video tutorials, and everything else you’ll need to learn how to make the software do what you want it to. The search feature will give you acces to lots of tutorials like the one I’ve created for this class.

5 Photoshop Basics

6 In-class assignment Photoshop gets very complicated very quickly. We’re going to learn by doing. – How do you get the second image from the first? Go to www.news-geek.com/jo540/photoshop and open Photoshop on your computer. Save IMAGE 1 and COYOTE to your desktop.www.news-geek.com/jo540/photoshop

7 In-class assignment Photoshop wants to teach you how to use it.

8 In-class assignment Go to Flickr and select an image from your slide show (this will be your practice “title” image—you may choose another one later to edit on your own) Save the image to your desktop and then open it in Photoshop. Follow along as we use various tools and presets to alter our images. We’ll add text, visual effects, and picture frames. http://bustudentshowcase.ning.com/ will show you some examples of basic title images others have created. http://bustudentshowcase.ning.com/

9 Useful Links – General Photoshop: http://www.photoshopgurus.com/tutorials/tutorials.html Lynda.com, TotalTraining.com, etc. – Include free and pay detailed tutorials. Lynda.comTotalTraining.com – Cool how-to’s: http://psd.tutsplus.com/articles/web/50-great-photoshop-tutorials-for- clever-beginners/ http://psd.tutsplus.com/articles/web/50-great-photoshop-tutorials-for- clever-beginners/ Youtube – Type in just about any “how to ____ in Photoshop” phrase and search, and you’ll probably find that more than one person has created a simple tutorial on just that effect. Youtube – Other: Photoshop is going to be an industry standard for a very long time, so I prefer that you attempt to use it for this class. If there is other software you are more comfortable using, however, you may use that. You may also use online photo-editing tools such as: picnik.com or pixenate.compicnik.compixenate.com

10 Assignment for Next Week Create a “title image” graphic for your picture story – Also: Crop/adjust photos in Photoshop and upload to Flickr. Organize the images and add titles/captions. Post revised story to blog. Bring three audio/still news story ideas to class. One audio/still story will be due March 16, the second on March 23. – Examples/Pointers: Telling Stories w/Sound Poynter Course Kanzi the Bonobo The Donner Party Extreme Drug Resistant TBA Trip to New York Mexican Wrestling Lens-BU Student Project DIGITAL ARTWORK: Various projects


Download ppt "Multimedia Journalism Multimedia Journalism Digital Photography Making things better with Photoshop Sec. C1 – Feb 23, 2009."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google