Showing posts with label Design. Show all posts

Friday, October 3, 2014

Genius Way to Turn Your Trash Into Treasure

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October 03, 2014

If you are looking for some clever ways to reuse the old items you plan to throw away around your home? These 25 awesome DIY craft ideas help you to turn your trash into treasure. Try these ideas, they will help you declutter your home, organize your living space.


























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60 Photoshop shortcuts to speed up your workflow

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October 03, 2014

When working in Photoshop, simple tasks can become a hindrance to your workflow. So, instead of becoming frustrated take a look at our list of Photoshop shortcuts right here. They're guaranteed to speed up your workflow once you get the hang of them! We've also have a great selection of free Photoshop actions to create stunning effects and some brilliant Photoshop tutorials to help you put them into practise.

So, whether you want to change the size of your text, deselect a layer or merge a series of layers - we've got it covered! There are also some handy hints for brushes, saving and closing, and viewing options.


Layers



Fill a layer

MAC: Alt+Backspace (foreground) or Cmd+Backspace (background) 
WINDOWS: Alt+Delete (foreground) or Ctrl+Delete (background) 

This command will fill an empty later with the current foreground or background colour.

Flatten layers

MAC: Cmd+Alt+Shift+E 
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Alt+Shift+E 

Add a new, empty layer to the top of your stack, select it and use the above command to flatten the layers in an image to sharpen the result. This adds a flattened version of the image to the new layer but leaves the layers intact too.

Merge visible Layers

MAC: Cmd+Shift+E 
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Shift+E 

This command will allow you merge all your existing layers in order to create one new layer. Beware! Once merged, they are extremely difficult to seperate.

New layer via copy

MAC: Cmd+J 
WINDOWS: Ctrl+J 

Use this command to create a new layer from an existing one. Sound complicated? Give it a go!

New layer via cut

MAC: Cmd+Shift+J 
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Shift+J 

Like creating a new layer via copy, this command will create a new layer with the selected image area in it, the only difference via cut is that it will remove the selected image portion from the original image.

Bring layer to top of stack

MAC: Cmd+Shift+] 
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Shift+] 

Here, you can move your preferred layer to the top of the stack of images you're working with in Photoshop.

Send layer to bottom of stack

MAC: Cmd+Shift+[ 
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Shift+[ 

This is plenty self-explanatory in that it does exactly the same as the command above but in the opposite direction.

Bring layer forward

MAC: Cmd+] 
WINDOWS: Ctrl+] 

This will allow you to bring any selected image to the front.

Send layer back

MAC: Cmd+[ 
WINDOWS: Ctrl+[ 

If you decide to change your mind, you can always select the image and send it to the back of the pile!

Copy multiple layers

MAC: Shift+Cmd+C 
WINDOWS: Shift+Ctrl+C 

Draw a selection, then use this command to take every layer into the clippig, rather than just the current layer selection.

Selecting



Reselect

MAC: Cmd+Shift+D
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Shift+D

This is a great command for any of you that accidentally click away from a section. Pressing these buttons will have that section reselected in no time.

Invert selection

MAC: Cmd+Shift+I
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Shift+I

Select objects around an already pre-selected image. This way, you'll be able to work around your main focus without losing it!

Select all layers

MAC: Cmd+Opt+A
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Alt+A

A perfect command for those times when you need to get everything in sync.

Select bottom layer

MAC: Opt+Comma(,)
WINDOWS: Alt+Comma(,)

This will select the bottom layer in the layers panel.

Select top layer

MAC: Opt+Period(.)
WINDOWS: Alt+Period(.)
This will select the top layer in the layers panel.

Deselect from the selection area

MAC: Opt+drag
WINDOWS: Alt+drag
If you need to deselect a certain area sharpish, then hit these keys.

Deselect all but the intersected area

MAC: Shift+Opt+drag
WINDOWS: Shift+Alt+drag

If you don't want to deselect an area, you can use this shortcut to ensure you're clicking on what you want.

Deselect the entire image

MAC: Cmd+D
WINDOWS: Ctrl+D

If you need to get away from the image, use this shortcut to deselect anything that you've clicked on.

Find the sizing handles

MAC: Cmd+T, Cmd+0
WINDOWS: Ctrl+T, then Ctrl+0

When pasting a layer or selection into a Photoshop image and it's bigger than the current image, it can be difficult to find the sizing handles. This command selects Transform and sizes the image inside the window so you can see the sizing handles.

Move a selection

MAC: Spacebar+Marquee Tool
WINDOWS: Spacebar+Marquee Tool

Want to move a selection easily? Simple press and hold the Spacebar and continue to do so until the selection is in the correct place.

Select individual channels

MAC: Cmd+3(red),4(green),5(blue)
WINDOWS: Ctrl+3(red),4(green),5(blue)

Selecting with Photoshop Channels makes removing a complex object from the background much easier than with other tools. And using this shortcut makes it even simpler.

Select a colour from an image

MAC: Opt+Brush Tool
WINDOWS: Alt+Brush Tool
When working with a Photoshop brush, if you want to sample a colour from an image, instead of clicking the Eyedropper tool, simply hold the Alt or Option key to switch temporarily. Then let go to return to the Brush tool.

Brushes/filling




Increase/decrease brush size

MAC: ]/[
WINDOWS: ]/[

Getting your brush size just right is one of the most important aspects of Photoshop. Do it with this command.

Fill

MAC: Shift+F5
WINDOWS: Shift+F5

Whether you want to fill the selection with the foreground colour or with a selected pattern, use this shortcut to get the job done quickly.

Increase/decrease brush hardness

MAC: }/{
WINDOWS: }/{

Brush hardness is just as important, so get it right with this shortcut.

Previous/next brush

MAC: ,/.
WINDOWS: ,/.

Save time and distractions by using these simple commands to swiftly move through the various brushes on offer.

First/last brush

MAC: </>
WINDOWS: </>

If you don't want to have go through the entire array of Brushes on offer, hit these commands to go back to the start or end.

Toggle airbrush option

MAC: Shift+Alt+P
WINDOWS: Shift+Alt+P

Simulate spraying painting with Photoshop's airbrush tool using this helpful shortcut.

Saving and closing



Save for web & devices

Pretty self-explanatory but if you prefer not to drag your mouse onto a number of options, use this shortcut on your keyboard.

MAC: Cmd+Shift+Opt+S
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Shift+Alt+S

Close & go to bridge

As the name implies, this will close your document and then open up Adobe Bridge where you can select the next file you wish to work on.

MAC: Cmd+Shift+W
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Shift+W


Working with your images



Levels

MAC: Command+L
WINDOWS: Ctrl+L

When editing your images, you'll be using the levels box regularly. Save yourself some time with this Photoshop shortcut.

Free Transform

MAC: Cmd+T
WINDOWS: Cmd+T

This command opens the free transform tool for resizing, rotating, and skewing the image using a draggable outline.

Curves

MAC: Cmd+M
WINDOWS: Ctrl+M

This will allow you to quickly edit the Curves on your image.

Colour Balance

MAC: Cmd+B
WINDOWS: Ctrl+B

This is a perfect Photoshop shortcut to edit the Colour Balance of your images.

Hue/Saturation

MAC: Cmd+U
WINDOWS: Ctrl+U

These two powerful Photoshop tools will aid you in the colour balance battle, and will decrease the amount of crossover.

Desaturate

MAC: Cmd+Shift+U
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Shift+U

Convert your colour image to grayscale values, leaving the image in the same colour mode.

Quick image fixes

Auto Tone

MAC: Shift+Cmd+L
WINDOWS: Shift+Ctrl+L


Auto Contrast

MAC: Opt+Shift+Cmd+L
WINDOWS: Alt+Shift+Ctrl+L


Auto Color

MAC: Shift+Cmd+B
WINDOWS: Shift+Ctrl+B

After a quick fix for a photo? While they're not reliable cure-alls, these tools are usually worth a go for automatically improving your images.

Lens correction 

MAC: Shift+Cmd+R
WINDOWS: Shift+Ctrl+R

The camera always lies, particularly where lens distortion is involved. Use the lens correction filter to reduce the effect of barrel distortion, pincushion distortion and vignetting. 

Adaptive Wide Angle 

MAC: Opt+Shift+Cmd+A
WINDOWS: Opt+Shift+Ctrl+A

Wide angle lenses can bring their own particular distortions, and Photoshop has a filter for this. The Adaptive Wide Angle filter can quickly straighten lines that appear curved in panoramas, or photos taken with fish-eye and wide angle lenses.

Camera Raw Filter 

MAC: Shift+Cmd+A
WINDOWS: Shift+Ctrl+A

With older versions of Photoshop you have to run Adobe Camera Raw as a separate program, but in Photoshop CC it's available as a filter, enabling you to non-destructively apply sophisticated adjustments to any image type.

Content aware scale

MAC: Cmd+Shift+Opt+C
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Shift+Alt+C

Scale your image to your preferred state with this super quick shortcut.

Content-Aware Move 

MAC & WINDOWS: Shift+J

The latest content-aware tool in Photoshop CC enables you to move objects around in a photograph, and it'll intelligently fill in the gaps where they used to be.

Create clipping mask 

MAC: Cmd+Opt+G
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Alt+G

A great way to keep shadows and shading where they belong, the clipping mask tool is a basic but useful tool.

Blending modes 

MAC: Shift+plus(+) or minus(-)
WINDOWS: Shift+plus(+) or minus(-)

Photoshop has a variety of blending modes to create cool effects. Use this command to cycle through each.

Black and white dialog box 

MAC: Shift+Cmd+Alt+B
WINDOWS: Shift+Ctrl+Alt+B

Speed up the process of converting colour photos to black and white with this shortcut, which opens the black and white adjustment dialog box.

Change image size 

MAC: Cmd+Opt+i
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Alt+i

Set up your image sizes with ease with this quick and simple shortcut.

3D



Show/Hide Polygons Within Selection 

MAC: Opt+Cmd+X
WINDOWS: Opt+Ctrl+X

Reveal All 

MAC: Opt+Shift+Cmd+X
WINDOWS: Opt+Shift+Ctrl+X

If you're working with 3D assets, use this option to view the polygons that make up your 3D models. 

Render 

MAC: Opt+Shift+Cmd+R
WINDOWS: Opt+Shift+Ctrl+R

Once you're happy with your 3D model, use this option to create a final render and create the highest quality version for output to web, print, or animation.

Viewing




View actual pixels 

MAC: Cmd+Opt+0
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Alt+0

Viewing an image in Photoshop in actual pixels gives you the chance to see each pixel individually - ensuring your work is perfect.

Fit on screen

MAC: Cmd+0
WINDOWS: Ctrl+0

A great way to view your work in all its glory on screen.

Zoom in

MAC: Cmd+plus(+)
WINDOWS: Ctrl+plus(+)

If you want to get down to the nitty gritty of your image, zoom right in with this shortcut command.

Zoom out

MAC: Cmd+Minus(-)
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Minus(-)

Get an insight into how your work will look from afar with this zoom out command.

Text in Photoshop



Increase/decrease size of selected text by 2pts

MAC: Cmd+Shift+>/<
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Shift+>/<

Experiment with text in Photoshop by using this command to change its size by 2pts.

Increase/decrease size of selected text by 10pts

MAC: Cmd+Option+Shift->/<
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Alt+Shift+>/<

Works the same as the command above but it's by 10pts this time.

Increase/decrease kerning or tracking

MAC: Option+Right/Left Arrow
WINDOWS: Alt+Right/Left Arrow

Adjust the space between your text in Photoshop with this handy command.

Align text left/center/right

MAC: Cmd-Shift-L/C/R
WINDOWS: Ctrl+Shift+L/C/R

A great way to experiment with the alignment of your text, this shortcut will enable you to do it quickly.

Show/Hide selection on selected type

MAC: Ctrl+H
WINDOWS: Ctrl+H

Speed up selecting elements on type with this easy-to-remenber shortcut.


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Thursday, October 2, 2014

Famous Logos with Hidden Meaning

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October 02, 2014

Did you know that amongst some of the most famous brand logos are little hidden messages? A lot of these you could probably see on first glance but others you would have to look a little harder. It makes you wonder how many other logos have hidden messages out there.


FedEx


The FedEx logo isn’t just two different colors. Look a little close and you will see they have cleverly placed an arrow between the E and x. This is to represent them always trying to move forward.

Spartan Golf Club


The Spartan Golf Club have cleverly disguised a golfer inside the Spartan’s face.

Mitsubishi


The Mitsubishi logo is combined the three-leaf crest of the Tosa Clan and the three-diamond crest of the Iwasaki family.

Toblerone


Toblerone originated from Berne, Swizerland. The town is also known as city of BEARS.

Toyota


VAIO


The first part of VAIO represents an analog symbol and the last two letters are binary numbers.

Coca Cola



Hidden in the ‘o’ of Cola is the Denmark flag. This wasn’t their initial intention with the logo. Once Coca Cola discovered that part of its logo looks like the Danish flag, they setup a media stunt at Denmark’s biggest airport welcoming customers with flags.

amazon


No it’s not a smiley face. But it is to do with the orange arrow pointing from A to Z. This represents that amazon offer a wide range or products literally from A to Z.

LG


Although this Pacman turn around isn’t confirmed, we think it’s really cool!


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Thursday, June 5, 2014

Coca-Cola Invents 16 Crazy Caps to Turn Empty Bottles Into Useful Objects

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June 05, 2014


Rejoice, happy-go-lucky and environmentally conscious Coca-Cola lovers. Thanks to this new "2nd Lives" kit from the brand, you can now transform your Coke into something even more delightful. Is that just an empty soda bottle? Nope, it's a squirt gun. Useless piece of trash? Nope, it's a pencil sharpener, or the perfect rattle for your baby. Make your children happy. Give them Coca-Cola, and toys made from Coca-Cola. And if you have two empty Coke bottles, you can even make a dumbbell to burn off some of the calories you gained by guzzling both.

Created with the help of Ogilvy & Mather China, the campaign features a line of 16 innovative caps that can be screwed on to bottles when they're empty, transforming them into useful objects like water guns, whistles, paint brushes, bubble makers and pencil sharpeners. It's all part of a clever effort to encourage consumers in Vietnam to recycle, and a rare success at the sort of alchemy that seeks to reincarnate garbage as advertising (even if such attempts are a cornerstone of the marketing industry). Coke will give away 40,000 of these modified caps, which come in 16 different varieties, to start.

It's not clear if the add-ons themselves are made from recycled material. Even if they are, producing more plastic parts might not be the best way to reduce plastic waste.

But that's beside the point. While the caps might not quite hit the sharing chord as clearly as the it-takes-two-to-open bottles, they're a smart bit of advertising. "What if empty Coke bottles were never thrown away?" the campaign asks. Clearly, it would mean people everywhere could finally live in a utopia where everything was made of Coke products.



source:adweek

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Tuesday, June 3, 2014

20 Historical Colored pictures

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June 03, 2014

The history of photography is only about 200 years old and the period in which it was possible to take color images, it is much shorter. However, the color makes us perceive the image we see as more realistic. Fortunately, there are communities of photo enthusiasts who color images in black and white, what makes us emotionally closer to our roots.

It is often difficult to realize how close we are, historical events such as the wedding day of our grandparents or the Second World War. Fortunately, today's digital possibilities glimpses, albeit in a somewhat speculative, our past, believe it or not that was in color. The coloring process is not easy and depends largely coloreador involvement. Lots of colors can be recognized by the subtleties of gray tones, photos in black and white. Another way is to investigate past fashions, the coloration of the places that still exist today and a fairly common sense, for example, makes us understand that the hair color of a person in a historic black and white photo is probably a natural color.

However, keep in mind that an equally important part of the coloring process, is the conjecture about the ancient fashions. Even with access to all information, in theory, you can never be 100% sure of the true colors and nuances that might have been captured in a picture given. However, Coloring a historic photograph, which would otherwise only seen in black and white, is podtía considered as part of a world that has never been seen.


1. Women Dealing Ice, 1918

Original photo: War Department / National Archives

Colored by Dana Keller 


2. Times Square, 1947


Original Photo: William Gottlieb 

Colored by Jordan J. Lloyd 


3. Portrait Used To Design the Centavo. Meeting of President Lincoln with General McClellan -      Antietam, Maryland ca September 1862


Original Photo: Alexander Gardner


Colored by Zuzzah 


4. Marilyn Monroe, 1957

Original Photo: Richard Avedon

Colored by Zuzzah 


5. Selling the evening edition of the newspaper, with news of the sinking of the Titanic the night before. (April 16, 1912)

Original Photo: Hulton-Deutsch Collection

Colored by Dana Keller 


6. Easter Eggs for Hitler, 1944-1945

Original photo: U.S. Army / National Archives

Colored by Zuzzah 


7 Sergeant George Camblair practicing with a gas mask in a smoke . Fort Belvoir, Virginia, 1942

Original Photo: Jack Delano

Colored by Ryan Urban 


8. Helen Keller and Charlie Chaplin in 1919

Original Photo: Roy Export Company / di Bologna Cinematheque

Colored by Zuzahin 


9. Painting Posters propaganda of World War II, Port Washington, New York. 8 July 1942

Original Photo: Marty Zimmerman

Colored by Patty Allison 


10. The Golden Gate Bridge Construction, 1935

Original photo: source unknown

Colored by Dana Keller 


11. Rehearsing Louis Armstrong in his dressing room, 1946

Original Photo: William Gottlieb

Colored by Dana Keller 


12. Broadway from the United States Hotel Saratoga Springs, NY from 1900 to 1915

Original Photo: Detroit Publishing Co.

Colored by Sanna Dullaway 


13. "The Tall Cowboy" Ralph E. Madsen to Senator Morris Sheppard, 1919

Original Photo: Harris & Ewing

Colored by Photo Retrofit 


14. The National American Ballet Dancers, August 20, 1924

Original Photo: National American Ballet

Colored by Photo Retrofit 


15. Theoretical physicist Albert Einstein, 1921

Original Photo: Ferdinand Schmutzer

Colored by Klassixx

16. Otto Frank, father of Anne Frank and sole survivor of the Frank family, visiting the attic where they hid during the war, May 3, 1960

Original Photo: Arnold Newman

Colored by Laiz Kuczynski 


17 Young girl with umbrella -. Louisiana, 1937

Original Photo: Dorothea Lange

Colored by Manuel De Leonardo 


18. Berths crammed into the concentration camp of Buchenwald, April 16, 1945

Original Photo: Soldier H. Miller

Colored by Manuel De Leonardo 


19. Peatwy Tuck of Meskwahki, 1898

Original Photo: Frank A. Rheinhart

Colored by Photocopshop 


20. Children after purchasing poinsettias in Union Square, New York, April 1908

Original photo: Bain News Service.

Colored by Dana Keller



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