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[♫music] [ADOBE®TV Presents]
[Russell Preston Brown] [in...]
[The Russell Brown Show] [♫music fades]
Welcome to the Russell Brown Show, and in this episode,
I'm going to be using the new Tablet-based
application called Adobe Photoshop Touch.
It's a great way to combine images together,
and in this show, I'm going to talk about
fading 2 images together:
A overexposed image,
and an underexposed image--it's a common problem.
Let's get right into it.
I'm going to click here, at the base, to
create a new image here.
Just like this..
And I have a couple exposures here
of some windmills in Amsterdam.
I'm going to open up one of the exposures here
and add it to my project--it's that simple.
Obviously, it's a little bit underexposed,
but I really wanted to get the quality of the sky in this shot.
I'm now going to go here, to this menu,
to add another image.
And it's simply displaying
my images in that album of images.
I can click and hold on my second exposure
right here, and drag it right in.
And of course, the photographs were taken
at the same time, with the same camera, on a tripod--
so they're pretty much pin-registered.
I'm going to select Done.
As you can see over here,
in my layers, I can turn the layer on and off--
and you can see the 2 exposures.
Now here's a great feature,
and it's really simple and easy.
Here, from the ampersand menu or the
More menu here, I'm going to do an Add Fade.
And that's what this show is all about:
The quick and easy way to combine 2 images
together--because there is no masking, per se,
inside of Photoshop Touch.
You use these Add Fade effects.
You can see that you have a set of
predefined Fade effects here that you can choose.
For example, I can click on this predefined one
and I'm starting to see the results already.
Wow! It was that simple.
I'm going to shrink this down in size,
by pinching here on my screen, so I can
see my entire image and be able to select
my items here.
It's this easy--and it's really, really great.
I'm going to click on this first control point,
and I can determine the angle and direction
of this Fade--Wow!
This is really powerful.
Look how easy and quick it is
to get just the lighting effect you're looking for,
by blending the darker and the lighter
image together.
If you click in the middle, you can move
the entire blend around, just like that.
So you have 2 options here:
clicking on the endpoints or clicking in the center
to get the blend just where you want it.
But, if you want to move beyond that.,
click on this palette, here at the base,
and it reveals your menu here.
And then, for more detail, notice how I can
click on this 1 endpoint.
And I can change the subtlety of that point.
This, then, is this endpoint right here--
the highlights--and then
here are the shadows within my mask;
and I can make really nice, refined
adjustments here.
But of course, there's always more.
If I click on this actual color swatch right here,
I can bring up this menu and I can adjust
the value of each of my swatches.
But, of course, there has to be more
because if I click in the middle
of this gradient, I can create a third point
and add even finer adjustments to that point.
So, some really advanced blending capabilities
here to blend 2 images together.
I'm going to click Done,
and take a look at my results.
Let's bring this back up in size--really, really
fantastic, amazing, fun, and simple--
it's Adobe Photoshop Touch.
Give it a try. [♫music]
[Executive Producer] [Bob Donlon] [Producer] [Karl Miller]
[Director] [Kush Amerasinghe] [Post-Production] [Erik Espera]
[ADOBE®TV Productions] [tv.adobe.com]
