Photoshop Contest PhotoshopContest.com
Creative Contests. Real Prizes. Essential Resource.
You are not logged in. Log in or Register

 


Photoshop Contest Forum Index - Fun and Games - Advice about Shadows - Reply to topic

Goto page Previous  1, 2

Marx-Man

Location: The United Kingdom!

Post Tue Sep 06, 2011 10:36 pm   Reply with quote         


jaw2785 wrote:
Well, I'm very glad that you are a PS god and can do everything by hand. With your extraordinary ego, you probably have to do a lot of things by hand. And I'm sure your artistic abilities are far above a woman who's work hangs in prominent buildings all over the country.
Yes shadows are supposed to be "flat"...

We all know a shadow is one dimensional. We don't need a physics lesson on the matter.


I have been relatively passive in this thread.

But you dun goofed. Twisted Evil

Evidently you need a physics lesson.

Technically shadows don't exist and therefore they can't be flat.

You see a shadow is an effect of the perception of light.

When you see light, the darker area due to the absence of light caused by an object blocking a light source is known as a shadow but there is no "shadow cast", it is merely where the light isn't.

Light travels in one direction but it is NOT 1 dimensional as it travels through time, which is a dimension of it's own.

Despite the fact that Arcacio is correct when it comes to shadows being cast on "3D objects" as having 3D properties (Width, Height and Depth) when relative to the viewer (he is also correct when it comes to light being absorbed through an object with a translucency which creates a shadow with depth relative to the origin of the light), The fact he is blunt enough to state that most of the thread isn't helpful is by no means a result of his ego...

An ego is: a person's sense of self-esteem or self-importance.

Whilst every poster has to have somewhat of an ego to post their perspective in a forum and not be a lurker (Heads up to all the lurkers out there, without you guys the views would be in the 10's and not the 100's) that doesn't mean that the information conveyed is an egotistical diatribe.

This is an egotistical comment...
"Please rate my work"
...because it relates to a person's sense of self-esteem or self-importance.

This is an arrogant comment...
"My work is the best"
because it may have or may reveal an exaggerated sense of one's own importance or abilities.

I need to clarify one major point. You don't need to be good at an art style to criticise its effectiveness or how it is achieved. You only need to know how it looks and possibly the techniques involved in production.

jaw2785 wrote:
There's a lot of great talent here. Fortunately not all those talented people feel the need to stroke their own egos by talking down to everyone new around here

Don't worry, I don't condescend (betray a feeling of niceness or helpfulness in order to belie a feeling or superiority)

If a work is shit, I will just say 'well that's shit'.

It's called honesty, it's a virtue.

For future reference this is what condescension looks like:
"Very good... you should try putting more shadows in."
(Like the qualifier for a work being good is the person saying that it is so and that 'qualifier' is a lead in to advice."

Here's what honesty looks like.

What happened to the shadows?

When people say things like: If you don't have anything nice to say... don't say anything at all.

That's the most condescending, because the person saying it, thinks everybody can't take a bit of blunt criticism and that underestimates a lot of people.

jaw2785 wrote:
In the mean time those of us who aren't so full of ourselves can just hope you get hit by a truck while admiring yourself in a street puddle.


As for this, this isn't helping anybody and you certainly do NOT speak for me and that doesn't make me full of myself for me to not want any part of that.

------------------------
You can draw a shadow quite easily without even touching it.

Start on a black canvas and draw only what you see. You will soon find that where the lack of drawing occurs, is where the stronger shadows are.

It's only because the convention is white paper to black pencil representation that the world of shadowing gets confused.




_________________

the burning couch

Location: I don't know, but it sure is dark in here

Post Tue Sep 06, 2011 10:44 pm   Reply with quote         


When creating believable shadows, always take into account (for one) what kind of surface on to which you are placing the shadow. The technique (at least for me) will be different between placing on smooth and textured surfaces. If it's a flat surface, normally a painted shadow w. layer set to multiply or overlay (w. gradients, masks, fading etc), depending on the effect (shiney, dull etc.) you are looking for. ...and to make things more difficult you also have to take into account the temperature of the light...ie mid-daylight often creates blue shadows...etc. So in short, (arcaico, pretty much said it) observe what's around you, and try to copy what you see. You do it enough times and you'll figure it out. For practice , go out and take a photo of something casting a shadow, composing the photo in a way to leave space so you can duplicate that shadow later ...open in PS (or your choice)....try different methods (blending modes,adjustment layers w.masks, etc) of copying the shadow in the empty area....and eventually......

*!*




_________________
Half of writing history is hiding the truth.~ Mal
seelcraft

Location: High Bridge, New Jersey

Post Tue Sep 06, 2011 10:51 pm   Reply with quote         


Wow!
It didn't take long to go from the physics of shadows to the psychology of affirmation!

"A spoonful of sugar makes the medicine go down."

Whenever I'm moved to criticize a chop for a major error (usually perspective or shadows) I try to sweeten it with a compliment. If it's so bad I can't find anything good to say, I don't say anything. (Probably not fair to the chopper.)




_________________
Seelcraft
Chemists have solutions!
jaw2785

Location: Indiana, USA

Post Tue Sep 06, 2011 11:17 pm   Reply with quote         


Marx-Man wrote:
jaw2785 wrote:
Well, I'm very glad that you are a PS god and can do everything by hand. With your extraordinary ego, you probably have to do a lot of things by hand. And I'm sure your artistic abilities are far above a woman who's work hangs in prominent buildings all over the country.
Yes shadows are supposed to be "flat"...

We all know a shadow is one dimensional. We don't need a physics lesson on the matter.


I have been relatively passive in this thread.

But you dun goofed. Twisted Evil

Evidently you need a physics lesson.

Technically shadows don't exist and therefore they can't be flat.

You see a shadow is an effect of the perception of light.




An ego is: a person's sense of self-esteem or self-importance.

Whilst every poster has to have somewhat of an ego to post their perspective in a forum and not be a lurker (Heads up to all the lurkers out there, without you guys the views would be in the 10's and not the 100's) that doesn't mean that the information conveyed is an egotistical diatribe.

This is an egotistical comment...
"Please rate my work"
...because it relates to a person's sense of self-esteem or self-importance.

This is an arrogant comment...
"My work is the best"
because it may have or may reveal an exaggerated sense of one's own importance or abilities.

I need to clarify one major point. You don't need to be good at an art style to criticise its effectiveness or how it is achieved. You only need to know how it looks and possibly the techniques involved in production.

jaw2785 wrote:
There's a lot of great talent here. Fortunately not all those talented people feel the need to stroke their own egos by talking down to everyone new around here

Don't worry, I don't condescend (betray a feeling of niceness or helpfulness in order to belie a feeling or superiority)

If a work is shit, I will just say 'well that's shit'.

It's called honesty, it's a virtue.

For future reference this is what condescension looks like:
"Very good... you should try putting more shadows in."
(Like the qualifier for a work being good is the person saying that it is so and that 'qualifier' is a lead in to advice."

Here's what honesty looks like.

What happened to the shadows?


jaw2785 wrote:
In the mean time those of us who aren't so full of ourselves can just hope you get hit by a truck while admiring yourself in a street puddle.


As for this, this isn't helping anybody and you certainly do NOT speak for me and that doesn't make me full of myself for me to not want any part of that.



Look. What the woman was trying to explain is... that a shadow... the ones that DO exist... in a drawing... should "appear" flat in relation to the scene. If you've ever looked at a beginner's drawing you will see shadows that appear to not lye against any surface, but rather seem to stand up from the ground,floor or whatever. And it's not just a child's drawing that shows this lack of "flatness", contact with another object or HOWEVER you want to put it. That's all there is to that.
As far as how you wish to express yourself, that's up to you. But there is a thing called "tact" and it is not condescending to be tactful. See, my comment about the truck was NOT tactful. But neither was it meant to be. And it sure wasn't tactful to say that what I wrote was a bunch of garbage.
I grew up in a world where being polite was the norm. But then again I'm 54. The world was surely no better off before politeness was confused with condescending. The internet has blunted civility to a great degree.

But I do appreciate your input and I will give it a lot of thought because it's obvious that you grasp the theory far better than myself. Twisted Evil




Meta Version

Location: Manhattan

Post Wed Sep 07, 2011 12:10 pm   Reply with quote         


jaw2785 wrote:

In the mean time those of us who aren't so full of ourselves can just hope you get hit by a truck while admiring yourself in a street puddle.

Would that be a puddle with a shadow - by any chance!

LMFAO




Marx-Man

Location: The United Kingdom!

Post Thu Sep 08, 2011 12:27 am   Reply with quote         




One example of 3D shadowing.

It's creeping into the glass as the translucency blocks more of the light.

It's creating "shadowing" inside itself which gets progressively darker.




_________________

Sh!Za

Location: Right here

Post Thu Sep 08, 2011 5:46 am   Reply with quote         


arcaico wrote:
best way to learn shadows: get the fuck out of your computer!

no... seriously... go outside and take a walk... pay attention in the shadows of things in the streets... if itīs a rainy day, thatīs how shadows look in a rainy scene. if itīs a sunny day, look where de sun comes from... thatīs how shadows react to direct sun light... at night, look at the objects in your house and their shadows... thatīs how shadows should look under lamps... and so on... itīs much more about observation than technique...

the technical part is just painting, blurring, changing opacity, burning and dodging... thatīs the easy part...

p.s. my latest shadows in an entry suck, but thatīs what happens when you try to chop from 2am to 6am.


dont like to say that, but he's right!




_________________
When I walk across the water, then my critics say, he can't even swim!

Goto page Previous  1, 2

Photoshop Contest Forum Index - Fun and Games - Advice about Shadows - Reply to topic

You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum


Navigate PSC
Contests open  completed  winners  prizes  events  rules  rss 
Galleries votes  authentic  skillful  funny  creative  theme  winners 
Interact register  log in/out  forum  chat  user lookup  contact 
Stats monthly leaders  hall of fame  record holders 
PSC advantage  news (rss)  faq  about  links  contact  home 
Help faq  search  new users  tutorials  contact  password 

Adobe, the Adobe logo, Adobe Photoshop, Creative Suite and Illustrator are registered trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated.
Text and images copyright Đ 2000-2006 Photoshop Contest. All rights reserved.
A venture of ExpertRating.com