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Digital Darkroom Assignment #11

cletuscletus Registered Users Posts: 1,930 Major grins
edited August 22, 2004 in Finishing School
Your Assignment: Cropping

Cropping is a simple but powerful tool for editing images. For example, you can use cropping to

  • Remove distracting features from an image
  • Change the location of the subject relative to the image edges
  • Remove tilt from an image
For this assignment, use the cropping tools of your image editing software to alter an image in a creative way. Be sure to post before and after images so we can see what you did! Feel free to post as many images as you like.

Hints
You can use the crop tool to make regular old rectangular crops:
7119668-S.jpg

7119669-S.jpg
You can make rotated rectangular crops:
7119670-S.jpg

7119671-S.jpg
Or you can make crops that change the perspective in an image:
7119668-S.jpg

7119672-S.jpg

Here is a link to a brief tutorial on the perspective adjusting crop.

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    dkappdkapp Registered Users Posts: 985 Major grins
    edited August 9, 2004
    Great tutorial on the perspective cropping. I wish I would have known that 6 months ago! GREAT idea for a challenge. Cropping is something we all do, and it can make an OK image amazing.

    I'll have to play w/ this when I get home from work.

    Dave
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    wxwaxwxwax Registered Users Posts: 15,471 Major grins
    edited August 12, 2004
    I crop so much that HCB refused to speak to me. But I haven't used the perspective adjustment tool.
    Sid.
    Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam
    http://www.mcneel.com/users/jb/foghorn/ill_shut_up.au
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    cletuscletus Registered Users Posts: 1,930 Major grins
    edited August 12, 2004
    Cropping without the crop tool!
    Here's a trick for letting Photoshop figure out the tightest crop for a non-rectangular area:
    Select the area you want to crop to (I used the magnetic laso, but you could use any selection tool):
    7233853-L.jpg

    Under the Image menu, select Crop, and bam - Photoshop crops down to the selected area:
    7233855-L.jpg
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    hutchmanhutchman Registered Users Posts: 255 Major grins
    edited August 21, 2004
    This picture was taken by a friend of mine on our recent MC trip down the continental divide.


    7574947-M.jpg

    I like the general picture but it needed some sky, so I added some

    7574949-M.jpg

    I still was not satisfied but. My eyes were drawn to the contrasty area of the trees. I wondered what this image would look like in black and white?

    7574951-M.jpg

    Better yet, but not there. Now for the crop.

    7574953-M.jpg

    I believe this is much better by taking away most of the foreground and background. It highlights the trees.

    Hutch
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    hutchmanhutchman Registered Users Posts: 255 Major grins
    edited August 21, 2004
    One more using the perspective tool for cropping and rotating the crop,


    7575563-M.jpg


    Then overcropping the upper corners of the picture, the trees become more vertical.

    7575860-M.jpg

    This one I think is the best. Whaddaya think?

    Hutch
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    ginger_55ginger_55 Registered Users Posts: 8,416 Major grins
    edited August 21, 2004
    hutchman wrote:
    One more using the perspective tool for cropping and rotating the crop,


    7575563-M.jpg


    Then overcropping the upper corners of the picture, the trees become more vertical.

    7575860-M.jpg

    This one I think is the best. Whaddaya think?

    Hutch
    Hutch, I love what you did. Not only a save, but a very good photograph.

    I like the top one, here, best, but that might be because I saw it first. Really do like it. Is that tool you used, is it in PS 7 or in CS or both. I have 7

    ginger
    After all is said and done, it is the sweet tea.
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    ginger_55ginger_55 Registered Users Posts: 8,416 Major grins
    edited August 21, 2004
    Nevermind, I tried it with my PS 7, I hadn't read all the way to the top, the instructions, printed them out, will show you all the results, they aren't perfect.

    I have windows falling away that I don't want cropped, have to mess with this.

    I agree it is an amazing wonderful tool. Thank you.

    ginger

    That is the original

    7578372-M.jpg



    This is cropped, and I tried to straighten it, not a keeper photo, but something to play with.

    7578371-M.jpg


    I can't even tell if it is better, but the potential is sure there, just need to find something to crop.
    After all is said and done, it is the sweet tea.
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    ginger_55ginger_55 Registered Users Posts: 8,416 Major grins
    edited August 21, 2004
    I can't do this one, this is the original

    7579003-M-1.jpg


    This is the attempt to straighten it

    7579004-M.jpg
    I think I made the original worse??

    ginger, any suggestions.
    After all is said and done, it is the sweet tea.
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    wxwaxwxwax Registered Users Posts: 15,471 Major grins
    edited August 21, 2004
    hutchman wrote:
    This one I think is the best. Whaddaya think?

    Hutch

    Hmmm, hard to say. I see why you prefer the last one. I kinda like the greater gap-iness of the first one. But the trees aren't straight. Didja try the transform tool? It's an excellent shot.
    Sid.
    Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam
    http://www.mcneel.com/users/jb/foghorn/ill_shut_up.au
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    pathfinderpathfinder Super Moderators Posts: 14,697 moderator
    edited August 22, 2004
    ginger_55 wrote:
    I can't do this one, this is the original

    7579003-M-1.jpg


    This is the attempt to straighten it

    7579004-M.jpg
    I think I made the original worse??

    ginger, any suggestions.
    Ginger - the crop tool with the perspective box checked, lets you do some really cool things - like square up a window shot askew or a painting - Your image is not real sharp at the top,but this will give you and example of what you can do with the crop tool with the perspective box checked.
    Pathfinder - www.pathfinder.smugmug.com

    Moderator of the Technique Forum and Finishing School on Dgrin
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    hutchmanhutchman Registered Users Posts: 255 Major grins
    edited August 22, 2004
    wxwax wrote:
    Hmmm, hard to say. I see why you prefer the last one. I kinda like the greater gap-iness of the first one. But the trees aren't straight. Didja try the transform tool? It's an excellent shot.
    I did not use the transform tool for this one. This was a crop assignment so I tried to use the features of the crop tool. Normally I do use the transform tool to straighten images and usually like the results.

    Hutch
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    hutchmanhutchman Registered Users Posts: 255 Major grins
    edited August 22, 2004
    ginger_55 wrote:
    Hutch, I love what you did. Not only a save, but a very good photograph.

    I like the top one, here, best, but that might be because I saw it first. Really do like it. Is that tool you used, is it in PS 7 or in CS or both. I have 7

    ginger
    I use 7 and hope to have CS in the near future.

    Hutch
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    ginger_55ginger_55 Registered Users Posts: 8,416 Major grins
    edited August 22, 2004
    pathfinder wrote:
    Ginger - the crop tool with the perspective box checked, lets you do some really cool things - like square up a window shot askew or a painting - Your image is not real sharp at the top,but this will give you and example of what you can do with the crop tool with the perspective box checked.

    Pathfinder, it was checked. Maybe I have no imagination, but I was just lost as to how to do anything really helpful. You got it spot on.

    Thanks for showing me that it can be done.

    g
    After all is said and done, it is the sweet tea.
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