http://www.ppsop.com/wxps.aspx
So nobody can control the weather? NOT anymore.
Not in your pictures, at least! In fact, after taking this terrific course you will be able to season your photography, meaning change the weather.
No kidding! You will turn any daytime scene into an evening one, add fog, change the color of light, create a starry night sky, and more
You will learn how to create warm and cold light in your photographs, how to turn a boring picture into a moody one by adding some candlelight to achieve a warm look.
You will be taught how to draw lightning and rainbows and make a flat sky into a dramatic one by filling the sky with clouds, or how to make a blue sky in one of those hazy-day pictures that we all keep in our drawer because they have boring, flat, gray skies.
You will make a moonlight scene from an ordinary picture and create a sunset from an image taken at noon, or turn on a neon sign without calling an electrician.
I will teach you the different kinds of lights available in nature and how to successfully recreate them in PhotoShop. But wherever there is light there is shadow, and you will be in charge of creating shadows:
I will teach you how easy it can be to add a shadow to the objects and people in your photos, and more. We will see how to cast shadows from a Venetian blind over faces, or cast a shadow of a window frame or the one from a leaf over the elements of your picture.
What about reflections? Of course!
You will learn how to recreate a mirrored reflection in sunglasses or how to remove unwanted reflections in your pictures, like yourself on the metallic surface of a car.
Adding a curved reflection on a drinking glass will never be a problem after taking this course.
This course is packed with creative, easy-to-duplicate PhotoShop tutorials and tips on techniques; every week you will be given assignments on the topic you have just learned. What are you waiting for? In only four weeks you will be in control of the light in your photography.
Sign in and become the next Photoshop Wiz!
To subscribe click here:
http://www.ppsop.com/wxps.aspx
You will learn how to turn a daytime scene into a midnight one adding even a full moon as bonus
You will learn how to create fog to add drama to a picture
You will learn how to cast shadows of different types on your subjects, like this blind effect
You will learn how to enrich your colors and give a suntan to your subjects
You will learn how to turn a cloudy mid afternoon in a romantic sunset
You will learn how to add a convincing rainbow in the sky and warm up your photos
You will learn how to turn a dull sky and image into s sunset like scene
You will learn how to make a cloudy day into a sunset
You will learn how to control colors in your photos like this photo with a very psychedelic glare to it
You will learn how to add smoke into your images
I am always seeking perfection in my attempt to tell a story in just one frame.
As a man, I never really had much interest in reading text; to me the images that illustrate an article or book are the only important thing to focus on. Perhaps Mother Nature sought to compensate for my dyslexia by blessing me with a greater visual imagination.
As a viewer, I love to see how other photographers interpret reality, offering us their unique perspective and point of view to arouse our human curiosity and help us all to develop our creativity by using our imagination.
As an artist, I pay as much attention as possible to details, lighting, colors and texture and include the environment, where the subject of my photograph lives within the frame. I love using my wide-angle lens; I like to make a statement by enlarging a detail in my imagery by deforming the size of objects with this lens, making them appear larger than they really are. It is like underlining a sentence in a book, making it stronger, bolder.
As a photographer, I am obsessed with the idea of being able to tell a full story in one frame only. Too often our minds are influenced by what the narrator or the journalist is telling us; I want individual viewer to be less passive and able to create his or her own vision of reality. That‘s when I feel my mission has been accomplished, because my task is reporting the truth to viewers and at the same time leaving them enough space and freedom to create their own story through their imagination, with my imagery.
Danilo Piccioni
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