LATEST ADDITIONS

Howard Millard  |  Jul 01, 2008  |  0 comments

Would you like to transform your photos into digital artworks emulating oil paintings, watercolors, charcoal or pen and ink drawings at the click of your mouse? Or would you like to try your hand at digital drawing and painting? Whether you want to explore your creativity or expand the services you offer to clients, creating naturalistic art from your images has never been...

Philip Andrews  |  Jul 01, 2008  |  0 comments

If you have tried Photomerge before, don’t skip to another article; this is totally different from previous versions.

Rosalind Smith  |  Jul 01, 2008  |  0 comments

Photojournalist Kevin Moloney grew up in Greeley, Colorado, amid the hub of professional cowboys and "bucking broncos." Although his father, a professional sports photographer, found inspiration in the sport of rodeo, this did not interest his son. It was the hard news and cultural stories that drew him to a news service from National Geographic and to magazines like...

Joe Farace  |  Jul 01, 2008  |  0 comments

The noise that appears in digital photographs is the visual equivalent of the static you hear in radio signals. Most digital cameras add some level of noise to captured images.

Frank Weston  |  Jul 01, 2008  |  0 comments

It’s easy to create a very sharp, realistic looking double matte to give your online photos an artistic presentation. All it takes is some very basic Photoshop skills and less than 10 minutes.

Steve Anchell  |  Jul 01, 2008  |  0 comments

The tips I am going to share here are all done in Adobe Photoshop. Photoshop is not the only imaging-editing program but it is the most widely used.

Jon Canfield  |  Jul 01, 2008  |  0 comments

To help make this as easy as possible, it’s helpful to follow a few guidelines for organizing your images.

George Schaub  |  Jul 01, 2008  |  1 comments

Nikon keeps cranking out new D-SLRs, most recently with the D3 and D300 (see Shutterbug reviews at www.shutterbug.com), and now, building on the great success with their amateur line-up of the D40 and D40X, the new D60. Sporting 10.2 megapixels (same as the D40X), the D60 has the lightweight and portable feel of the D40 series, with some extra tricks up its sleeve. Foregoing...

Jon Canfield  |  Jul 01, 2008  |  0 comments

If you maintain all your own images you have more freedom in how to go about tagging these photos for future reference.

David B. Brooks  |  Jul 01, 2008  |  0 comments

Microtek is well-known for making both consumer- and professional-level scanners. For a good part of their long history in the business their pro flat-bed scanners have offered a unique capability that combines a dedicated film scanner with legal-size, 8.5x14" flat-bed reflective scanning. The new ArtixScan M1 Pro includes a very modern 4800dpi optical Sony CCD sensor array...

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