![]() ![]() Select your rubber tool and begin going around the image making sure there are no traces of the background we’ve cut out. ![]() Now we have our image roughly cut out, lets tidy it up by rounding off corners and making sure there aren’t any jagged edges etc. You should be left with something resembling this:Ħ. Don’t worry about being accurate to the pixel, we can round corners off etc once we have the image cut out. A lot of people use the pen tool but I prefer to use the polygonal lasso tool then fine tune with the rubber tool. Let’s use an image of the England cricketer Andrew Flintoff for our main image: ![]() This makes the image a little more saturated and will help the foreground image we use stand out.ĥ. This will open up your levels options, change them to the levels in the screenshot below (or until you find something you think looks good): Make sure your image layer is selected and click ‘Image > Adjustments > Levels…’ This looks better but it’s not sharp enough, so let’s take a look at editing the levels on this to make it a little sharper. This will change your image to black and white:Ĥ. There are several ways of doing this but I prefer to change the Layer style to ‘Luminosity’ like so: So, lets make it black and white so it distracts the eye a little less. OK, so we have our background on the canvas but it’s a little too bright to use as a background and may distract from our main image we are going to use. I’ve found a nice high quality image of a cricket crowd cheering which I’ll use as my background, insert it onto your canvas using good old ‘copy and paste’ or alternatively save it to your desktop and import it in using ‘File > Place’.ģ. Seeing as though it’s the ashes soon, let’s use cricket as an example. Find a large picture that will make a suitable setting for a sports background such as fans waving or some nice stadium imagery. Open Photoshop and create a canvas 630px by 340pxĢ. We will be using Photoshop to create the image (sorry Fireworks fans) so without further ado, here we go…ġ. Version 2.15 may include unspecified updates, enhancements, or bug fixes.It’s tutorial time, we will be looking at creating a nice little sports graphic (finished image below) although the methods used can be applied to many other settings and scenes. Version 2.15 improves mouse responsiveness, adds a Server to Client connection to make helping users easier and allows creation of automatic connection shortcuts to specific computers. Provides a full-featured browser Web client to access your PC without the need for a client download. User accounts with rich permissions, server side hostname and IP filtering, remote screen scaling and unlimited server port-ranges. An unlimited number of user sessions with chat, secure file and clipboard transfer, whiteboard and remote screen painting. Server and Router IP address upload ensures long-term remote access on DHCP dynamic IP connections and the browser-accessible server allows download of a multi-platform client from any Internet connection. Full session encryption ensures your privacy and HTTP proxy connections allow access in the most restrictive networks. SimpleDesktop provides you with access to a remote computer. ![]()
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