Unfortunately I will be out of school from today through December 13. Each day I will continue to update the blog with links and an explanation of what I would like you to do. For today, I have three new tasks for you to complete. By far, Liquify is hands down the coolest of the touch ups that we have done so far! Use it to change some of the proportions in the photo. Make a nose smaller, eyes bigger, arms more muscular, etc. Then I want you to use the red eye tool to remove red eye from a photo. If you don't have a photo with red eye, you can Google it use one from the web. Realistically, I know that you probably delete photos that have red eye so you may not currently have one. Finally I would like you to apply a vignette to one of your photos. While this may not be an actual touch up, it does casually call the eyes to the subject and make a cool effect. Once each is done, upload the before and after to Schoology. That's all for the day. Good luck!
What are we learning today?
1. Demo: Liquify
2. Demo: Red Eye
3. Demo: Vignette
4. Objectives to Accomplish Today:
Dark Circles
- Open a portrait in which the subject has wrinkles or dark circles under their eyes
- Use the patch tool to blend the area
- Upload the before and after to Schoology
Smart Cast
- Open a portrait to tan the subjects skin
- Follow the steps to tan ONLY the skin
- Upload the before and after to schoology
Smart Blur
- Open a portrait to soften or “air brush” the skin
- Follow the steps to soft ONLY the skin
- Upload the before and after to schoology
Liquify
- Open a portrait
- Use the liquify filter to change proportions for the BETTER
- Upload the before and after to schoology
Red Eye
- Open a photo in which the subject has red eye
- Use the red eye tool to remove the color
- Upload the before and after to Schoology
Vignette
- Open a portrait
- Follow the steps to add a vignette around the photo
- Upload the before and after to schoology
5. Cleanup
6. Review/What’s Next
Period 4
Unfortunately I will be out of school from today through December 13. Each day I will continue to update the blog with links and an explanation of what I would like you to do. For today, it's simple. I would like you to make a cover page for your type search. I want you to use Illustrator and the video linked below to make a cover. In the video I walk you through a lot of tools and tricks that you aren't currently aware of. Watch a little, pause the video, and do what it shows you. Remember that if you don't see some of the tools or panels, change your workspace to Essentials classic. You can also find panels by choosing Window>Layers for example. When you have completed it, print the cover out. Once the search is done, staple the cover to the other pages and turn it in!
What are we learning today?
1. Demo: Making a Cover Page
2. Objectives to Accomplish Today:
Notepad
- Choose a theme for your notepad
- Grab a sheet of paper & fold in half twice
- Draw a design in each square using the same theme
- Choose the best design & make a rough
- Vector the image in it’s own Ai file
- Layout a comprehensive using the rough template from Ai
- Make a 4-Up
- Print a proof sheet
- Choose 25 sheets of paper
- Place the paper in tray 1 of printer, tell others NOT to print
- Send the job to the 419-C1 printer
- Collect & jog prints
- Put prints apart
- Cut cardboard (mat board) for backing
- Make a mount for one print
- Pad the notepad
- Trim the edges
- Tuck thumbnails, rough, comp, mount & rubric into pad
- Turn in to bin
Type
- Obtain and label four sheets of paper
- 5 Roman, 5 Square (page 1)
- 10 Sans Serif (page 2)
- 10 Script (page 3)
- 1 Text, 9 Novelty (page 4)
- Cut out examples and glue them into the correct section
- Print cover page
- Staple all pages together
- Turn in Search to bin
3. Cleanup
4. Review/What’s Next