Remove shadows from your photographs! It’s magic! It’s Photoshop!
Find out more from Colin Smith at Photoshop Cafe.
Find more of Unmesh Dinda’s content here.
Learn more in my digital photography and digital printing workshops.
Warning! This collection of videos may change the way you think about light. Photoshop’s ability to enhance and add light into photographs is so powerful few photographers grasp the full extent of it. You’ll get a good taste for this in the collection of videos I’ve assembled for you – even if you just glance at them. Or you can dig in and enjoy hours of inspiration!
My wife and business partner Arduina’s enthusiasm is intoxicating.
So I asked her to share a little of it with you.
Here are her 9 Ways To Bring More Joy To Your Photography.
1. PLAY!
Give yourself the gift of playtime. Try new things without judgement. Make a portrait of your neighbor, or your neighbors peacocks. Make a self portrait holding your most prized possession. Arrange a still life from your junk drawer. Try abstraction. Go underwater or book yourself a hot air ballon and try areal photography. Ask a friend to drive you around. My husband will sweetly slow the car down to help me make an image of a fox in a field or a goat on the roof of a shed. Try motion blur, long exposers or double exposures. Shoot with different lenses and cameras; try a 400mm lens with a doubler or a macro; play with plastic lenses or a Holga; or use a scanner as your camera. In order to get the most joy from playtime all you have to do you have to make time for play. I think of it as a healthy form of self care – if you can spend an hour on a treadmill you can spare a few minutes to photograph your favorite tree.
2. Experience A Different Time Of Day
Be amazed by magic light! Drag your sleepy head out of bed and watch as the dawn moves across your windows or play in the dappled light under a canopy of trees at mid day.
3. See What Your Eyes Can’t
Get yourself a tripod and shoot after dark. You could even use an intervalometer to make a time-lapse of yourself while you sleep and you may solve the mystery of who has been stealing the covers.
4. Explore
Wander about and catch yourself in a smile. Notice what you notice and make a record of what resonates. Photographer Keith Carter says, “Time spent in reconnoissance is never time wasted.” Time enjoyed is never wasted, whether you make a picture right then or return later with a wagon full of birdcages and clocks.
5. Be Inspired By Your Favorite Song Writer Or Poet
Pay homage to the song that got you through a bad break up or spend some time with Mary Oliver as she tirelessly guides you through the natural world.
6. Put Yourself In Someone Else’s Shoes
Try on a different point of view. Find happiness in shooting a scene while lying on your belly or standing on your tippy toes with your arms stretched up overhead. Any advice involving shoes makes me happy …
7. Lighten Up
Ditch your inner critic. Just because Edward Weston made an Iconic picture of a bell pepper doesn’t mean that you can never photograph a pepper. Just make pictures. In fact the one most people think of is entitled “Pepper No. 30” but he must have had an amazing time playing with creepy pepper #14.
8. Learn To Composite
So what if that cloud was in San Francisco and that ocean is in Maine ? Perhaps they would like to meet in a photograph?
9. Make A Print
Hold the joy you have experienced in your hands! Put it on your wall. Glue it in a book. Or mail it to your mother-in-law to thank her for loving you. I make my prints on an Epson printer – and I am deeply in love with that part of my process – but a print in any form (Cibachrome, cyanotype, or collodion) anything with three-dimensions is joyful to me!
View Ardie’s photographs on Instagram.
Visit Ardie’s website.
Inquire about one-on-one online training here.
People who take my workshops know my secret weapon, my wife, Arduina. It’s not just her technical knowledge it’s her warmth and hospitality. Those who visit us in our home know she’s the life of our parties. I mean who uses giant animal pool floats as lawn furniture?
When I first met her she was pursuing her MFA at and managing the digital labs of Maine Media Workshops. I’d never worked with someone as quick, smart, and knowledgeable. But that’s not why I married her. I fell in love with her because of her huge heart and her contagious enthusiasm. She’s the light of my life! She wants to share a little of that light with you now.
Her images are so whimsical you might think they’re staged rather than autobiographical. With or without a camera, she gives herself permission to play. On second glance, you’ll see they’re not unmindful of the sober undercurrents that run through our days. Her favorite quote is Milton’s “The mind is its own place and in itself, can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of Heaven.” You don’t have to guess which she chooses.
View more on Instagram.
Visit Ardie’s website.
Creating shadows in Photoshop is an essential skill for anyone who relights a single image or composites multiple images.
Here’s how two experts do it.
Find out more from Colin Smith at Photoshop Cafe.
Find more from Jesus Ramirez’s Photoshop Training Channel.
Learn more in my digital photography and digital printing workshops.
Colin Smith shows you how to paint with light to transform a flat photo into a vibrant image with dynamic sunlight, highlights and shadows.
Find out more from Colin Smith at Photoshop Cafe.
Learn more in my digital photography and digital printing workshops.
“The ideas discussed in this video series are adapted from Corita Kent and Jan Steward’s book, “Learning by Heart: Teaching to Free the Creative Spirit.””
Find more from Austin Kleon here.
Find more creativity resources on my website here.
Use Photoshop to create neon light effects and relight surrounding areas.
Learn more in my digital photography and digital printing workshops.
“Learn how to easily generate a color palette from an image. Then, using the power of sampling in Curves along with Gradient Maps, we will learn how to precisely apply the palette to any image to recreate the mood with colors.”
Find more of Unmesh Dinda’s content here.
Learn more in my digital photography and digital printing workshops.