Thursday, July 14, 2011

Custom Photoshop Brushes


A friend recently sent me a link to a website with some gorgeous brushes. After playing with them a little bit, I realized I could also make some lovely brushes in Photoshop. This technique works for any recent versions of Photoshop. It's really simple. For the sample attached, I found a pretty, scripty font. Grunge fonts would also be great. Generally you want to stick to black on white for a cleaner look.

Type your phrase.

Now use one of your selection tools and loosely frame the graphic. In this case I used a rectangular marquee tool, but the lasso tool would work, too.

Go to the Edit drop down menu and go slightly over halfway down to "Define Brush Preset."

Give your new brush a name. Voila! You have created your brush.

Let your imagination be your guide. Try some photo textures (convert your color space to bitmap so you have just black and white), or import clip art. I have many books of lovely Victorian clip art that are perfect for this kind of thing. Also, some of those "dingbat" fonts will work, too.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Busy Photo, Be Gone!



This beautiful egret posed so gracefully in a eucalyptus tree, but there was a big problem: branches in the way. The solution: the Spot Healing Brush in Photoshop CS5, with the Content Aware box in the options bar checked. I learned a few tricks in the process. First, of course, work SLOOOOWLY. Keep the brush size small. Sometimes this brush will do strange blurring at edges between light and dark. My solution was to use the clone tool (again, kept very small) at these critical junctures and then finish up (the rest of a branch, for example) much more quickly with the brush. Sometimes it would be necessary to go over the same area several times. I didn't want to take out ALL the branches, or the poor bird wouldn't have a roost.

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Saturday, April 23, 2011


I've spent these last few days doing a massive exhumation of the junk in my office, going through boxes, crates of slides and photo magazines that are mostly from about 2001-2003. The careful sifting of stuff has been a revelation. I didn't deeply realize how drastically digital photography has transformed the medium until I looked at these "old" (most of them 10 to 15 years in age) materials.

Photography has been both my passion and vocation for decades, but not until I looked at these old materials did I realize how much had changed. Before digital, a few of us had the photography field to ourselves, because of the complexity and cost of the medium. Unless one used Polaroid film (now virtually defunct), instant results were impossible. I recall waiting weeks to get my Kodachrome slides returned from the lab. Quality mid-day slide exposures were next to impossible on a sunny day without flash or reflectors.

Yes somehow we prevailed. My old magazines extol the virtues of 3 megapixel cameras (now my agencies and other photo buyers won't even touch anything less than 12 MP and nobody will look at the original slides because their workflow can no longer deal with the medium, plus the possibility of liability for lost/damaged slides). Although a few diehards like myself had adopted Adobe Photoshop technology back in the early 1990s, the early 2000s marked the time when digital imaging software came of age (now a necessity for most photo professionals) and the buzz was all about scanners, which were horribly expensive, $2,000 and up. I still have and use my old LS-4000 (now discontinued) when the occasional photo request comes in for one of my older, timeless images.

What's interesting is what has prevailed: photography is still about light and composition. Also, the emotional wallop always has and always will pack a punch; as I thumbed through old magazines, I cried again at the photos of 9/11 and reveled in Ansel Adams's timeless and amazing images.

What we have today is enhanced craft. The art has always been there. The photograph I post here is a blend of these two things. Let me try to give the thought process involved. With my wonderful workshop folks last weekend we explored a stately if somewhat gloomy cypress grove on the coast. At the end of our walk we came upon a happy family with two toddlers, one of whom was dressed in a red sweatshirt. I asked the parents if it was okay if we photographed the kids running back and forth near the line of trees. They agreed. Prior to that moment my camera had been set up for landscape photography, i.e., f/22 and slow shutter speeds, low ISO, with tripod. I lost a couple of frames with a blur of children before I realized I needed to be set up for action. On my Nikon D300 I dialed up the ISO to 800, opened up the lens, and took a series of photos.

In the computer, I first processed the shot in RAW for optimum exposure, color balance and contrast, actually taking the color down a little bit on the very bright red clothing. Then I ran a b/w adjustment layer on the image, taking the opacity down so there would be a hint of green. Then I used a layer mask to bring out the original colors on the two kids. I also added an empty layer and used my gradient tool (black gradient to transparent) to do a custom darkening of the edges, to bring attention to the kids.

Art and craft, now at an amazing new level of photography that pretty much anyone can do. This would have been next to impossible even 15 years ago. I've sent a copy of the photo to the family with the kids, something else that would have only been accessible to high-end pros 15 years ago. Finally, we can show that wonderful image as it appears in our mind's eye.

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Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Catching Up

It has been months since I posted to this blog. Life seems to have gotten away from me, in mostly wonderful ways. I've been taking thousands of photos, with trips to Europe and Alaska, portrait sessions and weddings, and now, private workshops. My website, sederquist.com, contains links to many of the thousands of photos taken during these journeys.

Recently I've been uploading hundreds of photos to sell as fine art prints at this link:

http://sederquistphotography.imagekind.com/store/

Here you can buy straight prints, or have them custom framed or mounted as canvas wraps. Prices are very reasonable.

I've learned some big lessons in photography from this, as I comb through old images (nearly all of them digital, made in the last seven years). I really see with greater clarification what "works" or doesn't work. Again, as I've often said, simplicity counts for so much. Also, my favorite photos communicate some sort of emotion, from humor to sadness or just sheer, overwhelming beauty. I find that I really love bright color, as shown in my portfolio of food photos. But I also love black and white, with its own special moods. As I write this I have processed and uploaded about 750 high-resolution photos using Adobe CS5 (sometimes resurrecting images through this new software that I previously thought were hopeless). My goal is to upload 1,000 photos, and as soon as I have finished this phase I will be shipping off batches of these images to my stock agencies.

I'll be posting images soon!

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Sunday, August 22, 2010


It's been an amazing and extremely busy few months, with little down time. Teaching responsibilities and trips: the ghost town of Bodie, then London, Burgundy, Greece. A couple weeks of respite and doing some lectures, then off to Alaska for almost three weeks. Thousands of photos later, I am still sorting and processing.

I'll be getting to some of these photos soon; meanwhile, here is an image grabbed from my desktop. It was made in one of my favorite places in the world, The Brothers Islands in the heart of Frederick Sound, Alaska. Our athletic cook had decided to jog this wilderness beach on a tiny islet. After beaching her kayak, back and forth she went. I dragged out my 70-200 lens and Nikon D700 and took a series of photos. There's nothing special about technique here, just an evocative moment and magic light in a magical place.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Ballet Dancer


Yesterday was a team effort. My beginning digital photography class worked with the wonderful Folsom photographer Gino Creglia and with my class of 35 students we took several local ballet dancers to a grassy, oak-rimmed field on the outskirts of town. The model in this case was Megan Harrell, a former student of mine. She gamely posed and pirouetted in a rock-strewn, sticker-filled field. There were lots of nervous jokes about rattlesnakes.

This photo was shot in bright, contrasty sunshine, so Camera Raw saved the day by reducing contrast. Since this sort of photo is iconic (anyone recognizes a ballet dancer), it responds well to special effects. This is the Topaz Simplify program, oil painting filter, with the effect applied to a second layer, then a layer mask used to bring back the details of her face. Finally I added a new layer and used the Gradient tool in Photoshop (foreground color to transparent) to darken the edges, then lowering opacity for a more natural effect.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Magic in the Ordinary


This little dress form graced an armchair in a local bed and breakfast inn. Headless, yet resplendent in sumptuous fabric, the scene gives a sense of unease. Where is the head? I hate yet love the incompleteness. The disassociation seems a bit unworldly, so that is how I decided to treat the image.

First, I aggressively processed the image as an HDR ( seven originals, widely bracketed and then composited) in Photoshop and Photomatix. Then I duplicated the layer, ran a Topaz Adjust filter (one of the sketch filters) on the new layer. I then lowered opacity and added a few touches of color with a layer mask.