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Adobe Photoshop and the Art of Photography: A Comprehensive Introduction

Adobe Photoshop and the Art of Photography: A Comprehensive Introduction

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Author: Steve Weinrebe
Publisher: Thomson Delmar Learning
Category: Book

List Price: $54.95
Buy New: $34.62
You Save: $20.33 (37%)



New (27) Used (10) from $31.01

Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
Sales Rank: 159865

Media: Paperback
Edition: 1
Pages: 448
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.3
Dimensions (in): 9.9 x 7.9 x 1

ISBN: 1428312099
Dewey Decimal Number: 775
EAN: 9781428312098
ASIN: 1428312099

Publication Date: August 15, 2007
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

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Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Adobe Photoshop & the Art of Photography   October 4, 2007
W. K. Ross (Boston, MA)
6 out of 7 found this review helpful

I've been using Photoshop for years. Several times I have beaten my brains out trying to set up actions/batch processing for large groups of photos. I always failed. Within two minutes after I first opened Weinrebe's book, I had successfully set up an action and put it to work automatically resizing and optimizing a huge load of wedding photos my wife shot last weekend.

Most software manuals are written by people who don't have the imagination to put themselves in the position of a non-expert user. This book gives you all the steps, in straight clear language, so you can do with Photoshop what you want to do. Further, you will gain artistic perspective, not just technical info. The author's love of photography is infectious.



5 out of 5 stars Clear and concise   October 8, 2007
R. Neibel
5 out of 6 found this review helpful

Photoshop is incredibly feature-rich software, and frequently perceived as overwhelming. Weinrebe breaks it down into easily understandable bits while still providing useful tips for very experienced users.

And the interviews with renowned photographers add a unique element, opening - at least a little a bit - a window on their varying perspectives and workflows.

Well done. This book is a valuable addition to every photographer's reference library.



5 out of 5 stars buy it!   October 16, 2007
etalieninaz (goodyear, arizona)
5 out of 6 found this review helpful

the book is well worth the cost: it is well organized and presents all of the capabilities of Photoshop in a pseudo-textbook fashion that are easily understood. At the end of each of the 12 chapters, the author presents a review: questions that the reader should be able to answer and exercises covering the CS3 capabilities that had been explained in that specific chapter. Also, the author includes interviews with 12 noted creative photographers such as Maggie Taylor and Lois Greenfield.





5 out of 5 stars A helpful guide for an old time film photographer   December 1, 2007
R. E. Bernstein (Philly)
5 out of 5 found this review helpful

As a long time film photographer making the move to digital this book was a life saver. The step by step approach took the mystery out of photoshop.
The language was clear and the examples relevant.



4 out of 5 stars What Happened to the Art?   November 2, 2007
Conrad J. Obregon (New York, NY USA)
3 out of 4 found this review helpful

The development of pigments by chemists changed the art of painting in the Renaissance. The development of film sensitivity changed the art of movie making in the 20th century. How will Photoshop and other image processing software change the art of photography?

This book provides instruction in the use of Photoshop, in an unorthodox manner. Most Photoshop books are organized along workflow lines, although a few work their way through each of the Photoshop tools and menus in order. Weinrebe follow his own order, dealing with light and shadow, curves, black and white processing, color tools and so forth before dealing with the tools used when first bringing images into Photoshop. Often a chapter introduces important techniques not related to the main one, as in the author's discussion of the use of the history brush in the chapter on curves. The author recognizes his approach is unusual, and suggests that readers go through the chapters in the order the reader needs.

The chapters include practical exercises that use images provided on an included CD.

The book recognizes the version 4.1 update to Adobe Bridge which is a component of Photoshop CS3, although I expect that the update was made available at too late a date for the author to do much exploration of its potential. (There has been a 4.2 update, but the changes seem to have improved code, without adding tools.) How else can one explain the author's dismissal of the new sharpening facility that allows for input sharpening, which is different from output sharpening?

Besides the instruction on using Photoshop, each chapter concludes with an interview with a famous photographer. Most of these photographers seem to specialize in montage, that is, the creation of pictures by combining images.

My biggest question was what happened to "the Art of Photography" mentioned in the title? Nothing in the material on technique goes further than to describe what controls and sliders create what effects on an image. No advice is presented in how to use Photoshop to create a picture that is more "artful" (whatever that means). The interviews are interesting but they don't include any information on how the artists used Photoshop to make their pictures more artful. I suspect that even Rafael received some instruction from his teachers on how to use the new pigments beyond how to apply them to canvas. Certainly, a few books on Photoshop have covered this terrain. I particularly found Rob Sheppard's "Outdoor Photographer Landscape and Nature Photography with Photoshop CS2" to be useful.

I also have some small complaints about the book. The text always appeared to be one or two pages behind the related illustrations, leading to a lot of page flipping. Some instructional areas seemed to scant the tools being discussed. For example, the chapter on Adobe Bridge mentions how customizable Bridge is, but neglected to provide any details in how to do this.

Still, a photographer looking for an introduction to Photoshop will be able to get started with this book. On the other hand, those looking for a more detailed introduction might want to look at a favorite of mine, "Photoshop Artistry: For Photographers Using Photoshop CS2 and Beyond" by Barry Haynes. It doesn't cover all the changes made to Photoshop in its later versions, but it will provide an understanding of the software that may even include a little bit about injecting the artful into one's images.


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