BLOGS
web Web > from O'Reilly Radar
AntiMap -- open source Android software to gather arbitrary data and visualize it. This enables you to be a 21C Francis Galton, the man who walked the streets of England using a pin to prick holes on a cross of card in his pocket, all to keep track of the relative average beauty of women in different parts of...
web Web > from O'Reilly Radar
Subway Map jQuery Plugin -- create your own London Underground-style maps. (via Chris Spurgeon) Webcraft and Programming for Free Range Students -- a p2pu class for teachers of web stuff and programming. Arts, Humanities, and Complex Networks 2012 -- CFP for a conference in Chicago, looking for visualization and data-analysis papers with a background in the humanities. How to...
web Web > from O'Reilly Radar
Newton's Notebooks Digitised -- wonderful for historians, professional and amateur. I love (a) his handwriting; (b) the pages full of long division that remind us what an amazing time-saver the calculator and then computer was; (c) use of "yn" for "then (the y is actually a thorn, pronounced "th", and it's from this that we get "ye", actually pronounced...
Audio > from O'Reilly Blogs
Seven years ago, at Project BBQ, I predicted a "convergent technology" device that would be a phone, a camera, an iPod, and a web browser -- two and a half years before the first iPhone was released.

 

FEATURES
Digital Media DesignDesign > Features
Deke McClelland

dekePod 018: Photoshop and the Andy Warhol Silkscreen Effect

dekePod 018: Photoshop and the Andy Warhol Silkscreen Effect

Have you ever wanted to create an authentic looking Andy Warhol silkscreen? One of the most influential artists of the 20th century, Warhol was known for his avant-garde paintings and screenprintings. Remember Warhol’s garishly colored celebrity images of Marilyn Monroe, Elizabeth Taylor, or Mao Zedong? In the studio he called The Factory, Warhol took an assembly-line approach to his high-contrast, silkscreens and produced art as a mass consumable, like a t-shirt or a pack of gum. It’s not surprising that his art is still popular today, and there are lots of one-click Warhol solutions. But if you want the real thing, join Deke McClelland in the final episode of this dekePod series, as he dissects Warhol’s process, and shows you how to use Photoshop to render your favorite portrait in bona-fide Warhol magnificence.


Digital Media DesignDesign > Features
Deke McClelland

dekePod 017: Photoshop and the Visual Communications Makeover

dekePod 017: Photoshop and the Visual Communications Makeover

Signs are our friends. They help us observe the rules when we actually need to know the rules. We don’t all speak English, and tourism is a huge industry, so signs need to be language-independent. Which is why a vocabulary of immediately identifiable symbols is essential to every working artist and designer. So if symbols are so important, why are most such an indecipherable mess? Computer icons! Laundry instructions! Or Deke’s favorite: What you shouldn’t throw into an airplane toilet! Learn what works and what doesn’t in this laugh-out-loud episode of dekePod.

tags: photoshop

Digital Media DesignDesign > Features
Deke McClelland

dekePod 016: Photoshopping the Great Masters

dekePod 016: Photoshopping the Great Masters

They say you can’t be too rich or too thin. So how about getting rich by making others thin? Plenty of experienced retouchers make small but enviable fortunes shaving body fat off already lithe models. But rather than showing you a present-day example--honestly, how many underfed waifs do we need to see made skinnier?--Deke takes us back to a time when ideas of beauty were very different: the High Renaissance. In those times of mean circumstances and manual labor, body fat was a thing to be envied. How best to take a well-fed model rendered by the likes of Raphael and make her look like a modern work of art?

tags: adobe, creativity, photoshop, podcast

Digital Media DesignDesign > Features
Deke McClelland

dekePod 015: Photoshop and the Lost Undersea Channel

dekePod 015: Photoshop and the Lost Undersea Channel

The ocean is a different world. Where else can you cavort with colorful animals a thousand feet or more above the Earth’s surface? But the romance of the sea comes at a price. Just as the watery depths rob our lungs of air, they rob our eyes of color. It’s not uncommon for an underwater photo to lack any information in the Red channel. Which is where coral, clown fish, and our very own skin tones live. Fortunately, Deke knows how to summon a Red channel back from the dead. Watch this dekePod and learn how to create underwater images that will satisfy your inner Jacques Cousteau.

tags: photo editing, photo production, photoshop, podcast

Digital Media CreativityCreativity > Features
Deke McClelland

dekePod 014: Photoshop vs. Adobe Bridge—Beware the Cache, the Cache Must Die!

dekePod 014: Photoshop vs. Adobe Bridge—Beware the Cache, the Cache Must Die!

If you use Photoshop, then you probably browse your images with Adobe’s Bridge, which shows you thumbnails of your files. Good news: The Bridge lets you preview images without going to the trouble of opening them. Bad news: Those previews result in large cache files that eat up your hard drive. Worse yet, they permit others to track what you’ve been looking at. Even if you’ve long since destroyed the original file, the thumbnail persists! Learn how to protect yourself—and maybe even save your job.

tags: adobe, photo organizing, photoshop, podcast

Digital Media DesignDesign > Features
Deke McClelland

dekePod Episode 013: The Mating Habits of the Pen Tool

dekePod Episode 013: The Mating Habits of the Pen Tool

Adobe's landmark pen tool defined an industry. But to the uninitiated, its reliance on anchor points and control handles makes it as approachable as first-year algebra. Until you see it's nothing more than a mating ritual: The points are boys and the handles are girls. Once you get that, it all falls into place.

tags: illustrator, image editing, photoshop, podcast