Professional Imagemaker
is now on the Apple Newsstand
 

Society of Wedding and Portrait Photographers - SWPP and BPPA TradeCanvasPrints

Friday 25th May 2012  GMT 


Professional Imagemaker Menu    Home  History  Subscribe   Articles  Architectural  Business Practices  Children Photography  Colour and Calibration  Digital Imaging  Fashion and Glamour  Infared  Insurance  Landscape  Light  Mathieson  Monochrome  Paper Chase  Photo Projects  Photo Techniques  Photoshop  Portraits  Speakers' Corner  Sport  Studio Profiles  SWPP  Web Design  Weddings   News and Reviews  Latest News  Albums and Preview Books  Camera Accessories  Camera Bags  Cameras  Computers and Software  Corporate  iPhoneography  Lenses  Lighting Equipment  Other  Photographic Laboratory  Printers and Papers  Storage  Tripod and Monopods  Websites   Other Languages  Denmark  Deutsch  Dutch  Espanol  Finnish  Francais  Greek  Hungarian  Italiano  Norwegian  Latvian  Russian   Misc Links  RSS Feeds  Find us on Twitter  Find us on Facebook  Available on the App Store  Digital Edition  Sample Magazine  


Click here to find out more

Members News

Monthly Image Competition
Cash Prize Winner

April 2012
Judges Choice Award Winner


Sponsored by Fuji
and Nik Software

Cutting it In Photoshop - Mastering the Wacom Pen

JANE Conner-ziser

The Wacom tablet is a MUST HAVE for anyone who seriously wants to do retouching or digital painting. It’s the difference between creating art with a pen or a potato and I am serious when I say that if I didn’t have my tablet and pen, I would not do digital retouching at all. It would be like trying to make a living fishing with a shovel.

That being said, many people struggle to develop the hand/eye coordination needed to use a pen unconsciously. Some people give up, in my opinion, because they don’t give themselves enough practice time to get used to it. In this article I will share with you some great practice exercises that will help you get used to using the pen. The first exercise uses Photoshop.

Hold the pen like you would a pencil or a pen. I put my tablet on my lap but some people prefer to put it next to their keyboard. The pen works just like a pencil or a pen. Pretend the tablet is a piece of paper and rest the heel of your hand upon it with the tip of the pen ¾ of an inch or so away from touching the tablet.

When you drag the heel of your hand you will notice the cursor follows the tip of the pen. If you lift your hand from the tablet and then put it down again in a different location, the cursor will ‘find’ the tip of the pen perfectly, every time. You don’t have to drag the cursor across the screen like you do when you are using a mouse. To select something, tap on it. To scroll menus, press and draw. A click is a tap. A double click is a tap tap. It’s easy!

Start the drawing exercise by making a new canvas: Hold the pen over the tablet, move the heel of your hand to guide the cursor over the File menu item. Press and hold the tip of the pen on the word File and draw down to New. Release the pen. Press and scroll across the options within the window and type in the size and resolution you want (I made mine 8x8 inches @ 300ppi). Tap OK./p>

 

Put the heel of your hand on the right side of the tablet. The cursor will jump to meet you there. Open the Brush Window and choose a small round brush just by tapping on it. Set the brush options to Mode:Normal, Opacity:100%, Flow:100%. Choose a colour from the Swatch Window by tapping on the one you want to use. Spend some time writing notes to yourself and doodling. When you are feeling bold, choose different brushes, different opacities, etc and let yourself have some fun. The canvas can be refilled with white by selecting Edit/Fill and choosing the options for Foreground Color:Normal 100%. You can restart as many times as you want.

You will notice that you can layer colours and paint right over things – it’s impossible to make a mistake that can’t be fixed! I would suggest that a new user of the Wacom tablet practice this for at least 15 minutes per day until you develop a sense of where the tip of the pen is going to be on the screen before you tap, and also gain control over making basic hand movements for writing notes and doodling. At this level, you’re ready for most of the retouching and editing you might do in Photoshop. The next practice session is done in Corel Painter. This practice will help you understand how to shape colour into objects and understand how different brushes blend colours together in different ways

. Cutting it In photoshop - Mastering the Wacom Pen image 1

Start by making a ‘blob’ on a new canvas. It doesn’t matter what brush you use.

 

Page 1 - Page 2

 

What our members say
Why I like the Societies: Level of information available to members. The quality of the site and the magazine. - Anthony K
Find out more about the Societies here

Convention testimonials Mark Johnston: @TheSocieties awards last night. Brilliant night some stunning images good food good times. Nick ghionis all day then its home tonight at 10
Find out more about the Convention here

Photo Quote: Many pictures turn out to be limp translations of the known world instead of vital objects which create an intrinsic world of their own. There is a vast difference between taking a picture and making a photograph. -Robert Heinecken

There are 228 days to get ready for the SWPP Convention and Trade Show at The Hilton London Metropole Hotel ...
which starts on Tuesday 8th January 2013

Bump 2 Baby