Photoshop
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v-spec

Original Poster:

779 posts

273 months

Sunday 20th November 2005
quotequote all
Hi all,

I don't usually stray far from the Pie + Piston or General Gassing, but maybe posting here is the right place for this question.

After a few years of digital cameras (currently a Nikon D70) I would now like to "improve" my photos a little using a package such as photoshop. This would be just for my own pleasure, no commercial aspect - so I was shocked by how much it costs! I was ready to pay around £150, but Photoshop CS2 seems to be more like £450...

So, am I looking at the right thing? Is Photoshop "Elements" worth considering? Is CS2 the latest, or likely to be replaced soon? And is there any other software around that I should look at?

Cheers

simpo two

91,032 posts

287 months

Sunday 20th November 2005
quotequote all
PS is the industry standard that most advice and tutorials are based on. However, from what I've heard, PS Elements is fine for most if not all of your needs.

I was looking at my latest collection today and there are only two 'straight' photos in it!

www.autograph.uk.com/bloke/gallery.htm

HankScorpio

715 posts

259 months

Sunday 20th November 2005
quotequote all
Paint Shop Pro X offers most of the functionality you'll need and has a downloadable demo. (about 70 quid)

Microsoft Digital Image suite is also good if you're not looking for the full creative thing and a just a simpler tweaking tool (and most photoshop plugins work as well). (about 50 quid)

But everyone else will offer other opinions as well...

beano500

20,854 posts

297 months

Sunday 20th November 2005
quotequote all
I suspect Elements is a good, no GREAT, starting point. I'm still on PS 6 (which still does more than my talents can stretch too! ), haven't updated yet because - partly of the cost, and unless you really need to do more than manipuating photos, I suspect three quarters of your money buys some bl00dy clever stuff that you might never use!!!!

Spend the difference on some more RAM for your PC!

FunkyNige

9,697 posts

297 months

Sunday 20th November 2005
quotequote all
Or just download GIMP and GIMPshop for free and then decide if you need more.

beano500

20,854 posts

297 months

Sunday 20th November 2005
quotequote all
simpo two said:
.... only two 'straight' photos in it!
Not got a spirit level in your bag yet?

simpo two

91,032 posts

287 months

Sunday 20th November 2005
quotequote all
beano500 said:
simpo two said:
.... only two 'straight' photos in it!
Not got a spirit level in your bag yet?

No, I fix them later in PS

Mr Noble

6,538 posts

255 months

Sunday 20th November 2005
quotequote all
simpo two said:
PS is the industry standard that most advice and tutorials are based on. However, from what I've heard, PS Elements is fine for most if not all of your needs.

I was looking at my latest collection today and there are only two 'straight' photos in it!

www.autograph.uk.com/bloke/gallery.htm


Love the site John, some amazing work there!

Do PH's get any discounts?

Greg

simpo two

91,032 posts

287 months

Sunday 20th November 2005
quotequote all
Mr Noble said:
Love the site John, some amazing work there!
Do PH's get any discounts?
Greg

Thanks Greg - I made them for the local gallery and also a craft fair on 4 Dec.

How many would you like Mr Prospect? :rubshands:

v-spec

Original Poster:

779 posts

273 months

Sunday 20th November 2005
quotequote all
simpo two said:
PS is the industry standard that most advice and tutorials are based on. However, from what I've heard, PS Elements is fine for most if not all of your needs.

I was looking at my latest collection today and there are only two 'straight' photos in it!

www.autograph.uk.com/bloke/gallery.htm


Nice pics, exactly the kind of thing I'm trying to achieve!

So you are using the full PS software to achieve those effects? I particularly like "old boat" - can things like this be done with Elements? These are the kind of things I want to do. The other Elements features like redeye reduction and file management aren't really important, and the Elements demo on their website focuses on these rather than what effects etc it has.

406tm

3,636 posts

275 months

Sunday 20th November 2005
quotequote all
v-spec said:


Hi all,

I currently a Nikon D70



Welcome to The CLUD

simpo two

91,032 posts

287 months

Monday 21st November 2005
quotequote all
v-spec said:
So you are using the full PS software to achieve those effects? I particularly like "old boat" - can things like this be done with Elements? These are the kind of things I want to do. The other Elements features like redeye reduction and file management aren't really important, and the Elements demo on their website focuses on these rather than what effects etc it has.

I use CS 99% of the time, but probably only know 2% of it... 'Old Boat' is basically just spot colour, so if Elements can do b/w and has a history brush, you're away.

I hate demos and tutorials; I would rather just poke things about, see what happens and try to remember the ones I like

NB It's the starting point that's most important; PS is just the final step which stops them being 'just another photo'.

>> Edited by simpo two on Monday 21st November 09:15

threeracers

713 posts

271 months

Monday 21st November 2005
quotequote all
I have been keeping an eye on this thread as I need to venture into Photoshop and I must admit I don’t know where to start! I only embraced digital technology about 6 months or so ago and I have made the step up to Rawshooter Premium. I have Photoshop 7 but I really need to sit down and play with it. Is there an idiots guide to these things to get started?

chris.mapey

4,778 posts

289 months

Monday 21st November 2005
quotequote all
HankScorpio said:
Paint Shop Pro X offers most of the functionality you'll need and has a downloadable demo. (about 70 quid)


I use PSP X, great program.

The cheapest way to buy it is the way "a friend" did - download the trial version, register the trial with them (it was PSP 9 at the time) - they were then emailed by Corel that "the friend" could upgrade to PSP X for about £30, so "the friend" paid, expecting to get rumbled at any time that "the friend" was paying the upgrade price without buying a version first, but downloaded the full version aand all activation codes - works perfectly.

Great value for an excellent program.



Chris

v-spec

Original Poster:

779 posts

273 months

Monday 21st November 2005
quotequote all
simpo two said:


NB It's the starting point that's most important; PS is just the final step which stops them being 'just another photo'.


Understood. The girlfriend is the real photographer, and has taken some stunning ones already. She sees pictures where I don't even think to look.

simpo two

91,032 posts

287 months

Monday 21st November 2005
quotequote all
v-spec said:
She sees pictures where I don't even think to look.

Excellent, that's half the battle. You can learn PhotoShop and you can learn phyiscs and how a camera works, but spotting and composition is best instinctive.

Bee_Jay

2,599 posts

270 months

Monday 21st November 2005
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Indeed - you can't buy an "artist's eye" at Jessops...

mikef

6,128 posts

273 months

Monday 21st November 2005
quotequote all
threeracers said:
I have Photoshop 7 but I really need to sit down and play with it. Is there an idiots guide to these things to get started?
A usual recommedantion whenever this gets asked is The Photoshop Book for Digial Photographers, Scott Kelby, pub. New Riders - available from Amazon. I've used Photoshop since version 1 and learned stuff reading it.

C&C

3,870 posts

243 months

Tuesday 22nd November 2005
quotequote all
threeracers said:
I have been keeping an eye on this thread as I need to venture into Photoshop and I must admit I don’t know where to start! I only embraced digital technology about 6 months or so ago and I have made the step up to Rawshooter Premium. I have Photoshop 7 but I really need to sit down and play with it. Is there an idiots guide to these things to get started?


You might find the following site useful:
http://luminous-landscape.com/
It has several tutorials and articles on photoshop and other aspects of digital photography.

C&C

3,870 posts

243 months

Wednesday 30th November 2005
quotequote all
Photoshop tutorials

Also just found this site:

www.photoshopcafe.com/