I had a break in at my office and got a video of the car and front plate. Unfortunately Dropcam's quality is not great so the image is a little blurry. I'm hoping someone on this forum can help me clear it up. I've tried various filters in Photoshop but can't make it out. Please help! We've been broken into twice and this guy just came back for a third time. If you want the video PM me.
Hi guys and girls im wondering if anyone would be able to help me deblur the license plate on the orange car in the photo i have attached.
Any help would be much appreciated. thanks
I have a youth baseball team, and our season is about to end. I would like to have a special picture done for them. My idea goes as follows. I have 12 - 10 year old kids, and our motto is Left Turns Only (in baseball your turn left). Well what I would like to do is have a image of a baseball diamond and have each of them going around the bases from 1 -12. With my little guy at the plate to swinging to my big guy being the last person coming in touching home plate. Can anyone do this for me. IF you can please email me at and we can talk price. Thank you.
Hello,
I am completely new to this forum so I apologize if this is posted in the wrong place. I am using Adobe Photoshop Elements 9 and have a question regarding file size/quality. So, here it goes.
I am currently working on publication that requires all downloaded photos to be uploaded to a website that has a max file size of 20 mb. When I download an image to use for a background (some sort of a pattern that is normally somewhere around 800 x 800 size) the image is about 180 kb which is perfect. Unfortunately, the image has a poor ppi resolution and prints extremely blurry so in photoshop under image size, I increase the resolution so that the file size & resolution is bigger. This takes a lot of guessing on my part.
For example, if I increased the image resolution to 100000000 ppi, the file size would end up way over 20 mb which does me no good. So what I am wondering is, is if there is a way to optimize the the resolution of the image, given the file size limitations, without all of the guess and check?
If this looks confusing, I apologize and will gladly explain more. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Hi Everyone. Im certainly not new to Photoshop. I have been using it since 1998 everyday. I am a graphic designer.
Think the reason I never come across this problem usually is because I make all my artwork for print in Indesign.
EG bring vectors in and images etc.
This particular project I have loads of textures that go over vector smart objects in Photoshop. As part of the look I need these textures and light leaks flooding across over the vectors I have placed in Photoshop.
Its a Zfold brochure and have built the whole thing in Photoshop due to the style I wish it to look.
MY PROBLEM
I have exported a 1x front of brochure and 1x Back as a Photoshop PDF and placed into indesign so I can use my fold and crop marks. This makes the live type that was in photoshop perfect and cant tell the difference that it was originally in Photoshop, it looks Indesign quality on my laser printer. The vector smart objects though are really blurry. Is there any way to keep the smart objects from rasterizing when saving in a file format?
Ok this is my wife jet washing the front of her car (mine is behind her) i took a cheeky snap of her through her back window she never knew i was there ha ha.
Very rare to see her hand washing her car usually i get told to do them all or she goes through the local car wash.
My request is this can you remove the white haze from the image leaving it as good and as clear as possible?
I can do it but i am interested to see how you guys do, please watermark if you wish, but i honestly have no wish to keep it, this was taken solely with the forum in mind.
I have this Cheese image which is sliced worm-shape. I want to know how to fragment/break it into pixel sized pieces, to look like sand. Pixellate might be a way, but it also applies a lot of new colors which are very different from the original size. And also Pixellate is not the smallest way possible.
Hi,
I am learning Photoshop in the hope of printing posters. I have questions regarding printing. Originally, when you create an image the resolution is set to 72 pixels/inch. I have learned I need to switch that to 300 pixel/inch.
1)Will I have to recreate all my images from scratch in 300 resolution?
2)Do I lose a lot of quality on the final product if i convert 72 -> 300.
3)My images are 11x17, when i hit 100% and view rulers, it shows my image at roughly a 3:1 ratio, why does it do this?
4)Can I view what a final printed image will look like with in Photoshop?
5)How do I preserve quality when switching to 300 resolution?
6)Say I use an image that is originally 600x600, will switching to 300 resolution make the new image horrible?
I may have more questions with as these get answered,
Thank you,
Geokatz
I have given this idea quite a bit of thought and think I am ready for the next step.
I do have some Photoshop skills, but I want to get this done right because it is for a tattoo. heheh
So I attached an image of a hand holding a gun. I think it might be an image from a video game (Red Faction perhaps). I like the style and perspective of the hand. But here is the thing, I am hoping to have that hand holding a tomato and not a gun.
I am just throwing this out there and hoping someone bites, so here are some details:
-I don't need/want any of the background. Just the arm
-The arm to be b/w and the tomato red
-Possibly a thin line of tomato juice running down the arm (red as well). If the forearm has to lose detail, that is fine.
It is almost like the tomato is a beating/bleeding heart in the hand.
I greatly appreciate any help and attempts. Even rough work.
Hi guys,
Hoping you might be able to help me out. I'm working on creating a portfolio website to showcase various creative works of mine that combine both my photography, and my writing. The portfolio site I'm building is heavily image orientated so I'm working on a way to use images to present my written work.
My idea at the moment is to break my stories up into manageable 'chunks' and place them over images that help tell stories.
I've been playing around in PS today, trying to work out how this can be done effectively. What I created however, isn't particularly great and I was hoping you guys might have some tips for working with text in Photoshop??
The image below is what I've got so far (very basic and incredibly unfinished!), I used a random font I found that I liked (any things I should look for in a font?), used the skew, and perspective tools after converting to smart object and I created a bit of shadowing under the text. One of the issues I had was that it's awkward to know what will happen to the text when it's distorted so I found myself duplicating the first text layer to skew, then deleting, editing the text a bit and repeating to get the formatting. It was quite a faff, is there an easier way?
I would really appreciate any feedback, constructive criticism, and tips. I'd like to make this Photoshopping process as simple as possible for myself in the future so I can keep creating easily.
Cheers,
KQ
Hello! Very much so a noob question . ive done my research and im just here for a very definite tutorial . im learning how to resize images from Big to small. Only problem is i cant seem to keep the high quality resolution . Ive included both images .. the "moonshine" collage is what id like to minimize. The "Whiskey" image is able to be downsized with no resolution loss when i downsize why? ID also like to keep them PNG or transparent in the background .
the moonshine collage image is one i made in photoshop cs6.
id like to make them W:280 pixels H:110 pixels/100 pixels
Theres a screen shot of the photo in place . The GREEN image is the image in low resolution , which i cannot figure why . the other RED image is how id like all my images to appear . There both pretty big original images as well ..