This hilarious informercial parody of Adobe Photoshop beauty retouching makes light of the standards of beauty in our society in this very clever video by Jesse Rosten introducing a new make-up line Fotoshop by Adobé. It’s a perfect send-off of all those late-night infomercials where the befores and afters seem to be nothing more than photoshopped versions of the same photos.
It’s no news that Photographers are increasingly interesting in DSLR video editing. In an effort to get the best available editing software in the hands of every video and photography professional, Adobe is offering a discount of 50% off Production Premium or Premiere Pro CS5.5 to all current Final Cut Pro and Avid users. To learn more about this offer, go to: http://www.adobe.com/products/premiere/switch.html
Adobe CS5.5 Production Premium allows you to enjoy a fully-featured professional editing workflow and offers many benefits such as:
Timesaving integration between Premiere Pro and After Effects and Photoshop.
Powerful editing performance that provides real-time effects and color correction/color grading, accelerated rendering, and superior multilayer performance.
Broad native format support: Import and export virtually any format and even FCP 7 projects, and skip time-consuming transcoding and rewrapping processes when working natively with file-based and DSLR footage.
You’ll find the learning curve easy, thanks to Final Cut Pro and Avid keyboard shortcuts in Premiere Pro and many user interface enhancements so you can edit the way you’re used to. And there is a new show on Adobe TV called Moving to Adobe Premiere Pro.
Use the “SWITCH” code on adobe.com Store to take advantage of the savings. Offer expires October 31, 2011.
Website design has never been easier than with Muse, new software currently in beta from Adobe.
Muse (code name) promises to let users ‘create websites as easily as you can create layouts for print’. You can design and publish HTML websites without writing code or working within restrictive templates, with functionality similar to InDesign.
Features will include drag and drop customizable widgets like navigation menus; embedded HTML code snippets from sources including Google Maps, YouTube and Facebook; and the ability to create Adobe-hosted trial sites for testing and review purposes.
Adobe evangelist Russell Brown has brought out a lot of cool scripts – but none as sweet as his new Dr. Brown’s Process 1-2-3. Available as a free download as part of Dr. Brown’s Services 1.9.2 that can be found here.
Consider it an update of his very useful Image Processor on STEROIDS!
Dr. Brown’s Process 1-2-3 allows you to save up to three sets of images out of Bridge as PSDs, TIFFs or JPEGs selecting color spaces for each and in any compression settings independently for each set of images. You can also run a batch action at the end of the process if for instance you wish to change from 16bit to 8bit after the converting to the final color space.
Here’s where it comes in handy. My working layered files are full-Rez 16bit ProPhoto PSDs generally from a Leaf Aptus 75S. So I need to downrez and convert the color profile before delivering the files to my clients and my photo agency. But the file specs are different for each.
When submitting to magazines, I submit 8bit Tiffs in Colormatch RGB – 18 inches (5400 pixels) in the longest dimension – and I use Lossless LZW compression to make upload quicker.
My stock agency requests uncompressed 8bit Tiffs in Adobe 98 – no larger than 80mb (which translates to roughly 6000 pixels in the longest dimension when shooting 4×3 format.)
Before now it was a pain to downrez two sets of files at different resolutions, different color spaces and different resolutions. Dr Brown’s Process 1-2-3 makes it easy. I save both as presets that save the files in subfolders marked “Corbis” and “Magazine” in the same folder as the layered full-rez 16bit files.
Smith is a Sony Artisan of Imagery and a X-Rite Coloratti and has appeared on Fine Living Channel teaching a Little League Mom how to become a Big League Sports Photographer. His photography career began as a high school swimmer clearly not destined for the Olympics in the pool, yet this provided him with the opportunity to photograph swimming and other sports as a stringer for the Ames Daily Tribune.
Smith is President of Editorial Photographers, an organization of 2,000 of the top magazine photographers and newspaper photojournalists from around the world. He is frequently a speaker at photography seminars and to photo students at colleges, universities and art institutes around the country and can often be found on a flight headed to the Caribbean, Latin America or the American South from his home in Miami Beach, Florida.