Adobe

testing

Are you giving up on QuarkXPress? Are you apprehensive about climbing the steep
learning curve of adapting to Adobe InDesign after so many years of dealing
with and accepting QuarkXPress for what it is? This Total Training package was
made with you in mind–I’m convinced of it.

What is Total Training?

Total Training is a company that specializes in teaching the difficult lessons
of mastering computer software via video–a medium that simplifies the learning
by showing rather than describing what to do. In most cases the discs are standard
DVDs for use in any player but in this case, the video is delivered via a proprietary
media viewer (on a Macromedia engine) that you install along with the project
files. Project files? Yes, that’s another great thing about Total Training packages:
they have all been designed to be used while the student is following along
with the lessons using supplied files. It’s the perfect marriage of "learn
by viewing" and "learn by doing."

What is Making the Switch?

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I’d be pretty
surprised if someone who was totally new to digital page layout couldn’t
benefit from this package as well. It really is a good all around curriculum
of InDesign teaching that is sure to jump start anyone to being a confident
Adobe InDesign user even before the lessons are completed.

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Total Training’s QuarkXPress to Adobe InDesign — Making the Switch (to be
referred to as simply "Making the Switch" for the remainder of this
review) is a video CD-ROM presentation that runs on you Mac (not in a DVD player
as with other Total Training products). The lessons are taught by Deke McClelland
and are quite enjoyable. Deke is an excellent speaker and teacher. I can only
think of a small number of people who could make 3 hours of software instruction
interesting and Deke McClelland is on the top of that list. Deke explains in
QuarkXPress terms what InDesign does. That is not to say that only one fluent
in the ways of QuarkXPress would understand him but the idea here is to help
people in the process of, well, making the switch.

The stats

The interface of the Total Training media application is useful enough. It
allows you full access to all the lessons of the disc and the chapters contained
within them. Each of the 6 lessons runs somewhere between 24 and 39 minutes
giving you 3 hours of training on "Getting Around", "Display
Settings & Page Navigation", "Placing and Flowing Text",
Selecting & Formatting Text", "Guidelines and Graphics" and
"Transparency and Transitioning." For the interest of those using
Adobe InDesign on that other operating system, the video segments alternate
between the Mac environment and the OS that must not be named. At no time does
this present a problem for operators on either OS since Deke is always careful
to give the keyboard shortcuts and menu instructions for each platform if and
when they differ.

The lessons

Each lesson is taught with the understanding that the learner already understands
how to use QuarkXPress but, interestingly enough, I’d be pretty surprised if
someone who was totally new to digital page layout couldn’t benefit from this
package as well. It really is a good all around curriculum of InDesign teaching
that is sure to jump start anyone to being a confident Adobe InDesign user even
before the lessons are completed. Deke teaches all the basics of page layout
in Adobe InDesign CS as well as a brief rundown on what to expect when opening
old QuarkXPress documents in your newly adopted application of choice.

Here, why don’t you watch
one?
I’ve uploaded a clip of Deke explaining how to change the
resolution of each screen item separately of one another as well as how to change
the overall screen display performance. You’ll get an idea of the type of instruction
to expect from this package and, indeed, much of the Total Training product
line.

One caveat:

What should be noted is what the lessons do not teach, which are the dos and
don’ts of Adobe InDesign page layout. And while I like and enthusiastically
recommend this disc for the wealth of knowledge it offers on making the transition
from QuarkXPress to Adobe InDesign, I can’t let you leave thinking that it is
total solution to knowing and understanding InDesign. It doesn’t offer that
kind of information, nor does it purport to. I would encourage you to see this
disc as a companion or introduction to other instructional materials be they
books, seminars or other Total Training discs. And a strong introduction it
is.

Experimenting with Adobe Photoshop CS3 (Comic Effect Deconstructed)

(from Episode #74 of The Lab with Leo Laporte)

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S.C.A.M.P.E.R.
Photoshop is supposed to be a creative outlet, right? But it has so many features and settings that sometimes we’re so overwhelmed that we become afraid to just play with it. We might have an effect in mind and we search the internet for it. When we find it, sometimes it’s not what we have in mind or often we don’t find it at all and we just give up. “Photoshop can’t do that.� we tell ourselves.

We have to give ourselves the freedom to play and we have to give Photoshop the freedom to do things that it was never expected to do.

For instance, Photoshop has a Photocopy filter, right? Have you ever tried using it for something other than making an image look like it was photocopied? Give it a chance! Most of Photoshop’s filters can be adjusted to the degree where the effect they produce looks nothing like what its label in the Filters menu would have you expect. What is important to note in those situations is not that the particular combination of settings doesn’t look like a photocopied image, but what does it look like? What effect can you use this combination of settings to achieve?

Don’t be held back by the labels on the menus!

This kind of thinking can (and should) be applied to Photoshop tutorials you find online and in books as well. Follow the tutorials as they were written and see how the effect materializes as it was intended by the tutorial’s author. But then, after you’re familiar with what it does, play around with the tutorial a bit and see what else comes out of it.

Here, we’re going to take my Comic Art Effect tutorial and apply Alex Osborne’s S.C.A.M.P.E.R. principle to see what other effects we can make from it.

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S.C.A.M.P.E.R. stands for:
Substitute
Combine
Adapt
Modify
Put to some other use
Eliminate
Rearrange

A brief Breakdown of the Comic Art Effect
This is an effect is based on a Tone layer and a Color layer to approximate the coloring of a vintage comic book illustration and 3 Ink layers to give the effect of “hand drawn� outlines and shading. At the end of the tutorial he recommended adding another color layer to tweak skin tones that may have gone astray, a white layer to brighten teeth and eyes, and a dot screen layer to give the image that course dot pattern associated with old comic books.


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Substitute
Try Substituting different filters in tutorials. In the case of this tutorial, you might substitute the second and third Ink layers with one where you have copied the original image to a new layer above Ink 1. Set the new layer to “Multiply� with an opacity of 50% and then apply Filter>Sketch>Graphic Pen using the settings 15, 43, Left Diagonal. It gives a much softer illustrative effect.


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Combine
If you have Adobe Photoshop CS3 as part of a Creative Suite bundle, you probably have Adobe Illustrator CS3 as well. Why not combine its abilities with Photoshop to create effects that could not be achieved using either application on their own? He had saved a copy of my finished Photoshop Comic Effect where I turned off all of the Ink layers and saved it as a flattened TIF. He then opened that TIF in Illustrator and used Live Trace to simplify the colors to look a bit like and Andy Warhol pop-art painting.


Adapt
If you look on MacMerc.com, you’ll find that this tutorial has been Adapted for use as a Photoshop Action. It has also been adapted for Adobe Elements. If you don’t happen to own Adobe Photoshop, that shouldn’t stop you from enjoying a free open-source creative outlet—namely, Gimpshop! I unfortunately haven’t adapted this tutorial for use with Gimpshop but that’s only because I have Photoshop. I welcome and encourage any of you Gimpshop experts out there to take a crack at the Comic Art Effect and and let me know how it goes. I’d love to link to your tutorials!!


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Modify
Photoshop has long offered non-destructive ways of modifying an image; affording safe experimentation where any mistakes or undesired results are entirely reversible. Once you’ve finished a tutorial, don’t be afraid to go over it again and change the filter settings. Use Smart Filters, if you can, and then you can go back again and again and try new effects and settings. Layer Masks and Adjustment Layers also allow for experimentation.
I have added an Adjustment Layer to my file to cycle the color of my image through the rainbow to create a psychedelic result.


Put it to some other use
Who says Photoshop has to just be for static images? Go to video! After all, video is just a string of still images strung together and displayed in quick succession. Look at what one person has done using the Comic Art Effect tutorial (click to view video above).


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Eliminate
For “Eliminate,� try turning off all but the Ink layers. For many photos I’ve tried this effect on, turning off everything but the Ink layers creates and pretty cool looking illustrative effect. This was the inspiration for my Frank Miller Sin City Effect.


Rearrange
While my experiments with rearranging or reversing the Layers and steps of this tutorial didn’t return any pleasing results, the technique of Layer shuffling often does produce new and interesting effects that you can call your own.


Conclusion
So, bottom line, I hope you’ll be encouraged to play a bit with Photoshop and apply the S.C.A.M.P.E.R. principle. The only way to feel comfortable using any software is to become familiar with it and an excellent way to do that is to explore and experiment.
Have fun!!

Catching some AIR (apps)

Times were simpler then. Macromedia was just Macromedia (not Adobe) and they had a new application called Macromedia Central. The idea: provide a framework to run rich web applications. Central was a pretty cool idea, that never really got the apps it needed to survive.

But now, reincarnated as AIR, the idea is ready for the masses. AIR apps are cross-platform and support unique interaction with your filesystem making them much more powerful than a widget, and more useful off-line. There aren’t many AIR applications out there yet, but some of the first are pretty useful. AIR apps are proving themselves as the way to go for quick posts and storage of data chunks.

Twhirl

Pownce, now open to the public, released its desktop application as an AIR app. And AIR turnes out to be a great place for micro-blogging. The prime example: Twhirl. This AIR app allows you to post to Twitter, Pownce and Jaiku simultaneously.

twhirl Catching some AIR (apps)

Put that’s not all. The AIR interface supports cool window styling (and Twirl has multiple themes to chose from) and provides you with live updates on your Twitter friends. You can also run multiple accounts, search tweets and users. Twhirl takes your posting out of the browser, and adds a polished widget-looking application to your desktop.

ShifD

Twitter is great for sharing quips and updates, but what do you do with the tiny bits of information you don’t want to share? ShifD has an answer for that. The online services allows you to stash notes, URLs and addresses to your own online account where they can be tagged, edited and archived.

shifd Catching some AIR (apps)

You can send items to ShifD with a bookmerklet, and of course, an AIR app. The ShifD AIR app is nicely styles – if a little large. It allows you to add and manage your data and works off-line.

Those are a couple of the interesting AIR apps out there. Here is a short list of others to check out:

  • Klok – A project time tracker with Excel export and a very cool interface
  • Apprise – A Demo RSS reader from Adobe
  • RichFLV – An FLV file editor with export
  • WebKut – A webpage screen-shotting tool
  • – An AIR desktop client for xDrive

It really is nice to enjoy cross-platform apps that are attractive and responsive (Java, I’m looking at you). AIR apps aren’t for everything, but they can fill in some nice vacancies on your desktop. Enjoy!

Brian