Adobe After Effects CC Reviews

Adobe After Effects CC

Adobe After Effects CC

  • Industry-leading animation and compositing software used by motion graphics and visual effects artists worldwide
  • The full version of After Effects CC to download, install, and run on your computer
  • Immediate access to all the latest updates and new features as soon as they’re released
  • Easy syncing of your After Effects settings to any computer in any edit bay in the world
  • A growing library of expert video tutorials to help you get up to speed quickly and master new skills

After Effects CC — Part of Adobe Creative Cloud Make the impossible real with the new, more connected After Effects CC. Get powerful timesaving features like a Live 3D Pipeline that brings in CINEMA 4D scenes without intermediate rendering, plus a 3D Camera Tracker, which reproduces a scene’s original camera movement so you can add new layers — including video and text layers. Because After Effects CC is part of Adobe Creative Cloud, you get immediate and exclusive a

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The Artist’s Guide to GIMP Effects: Creative Techniques for Photographers, Artists, and Designers

The Artist's Guide to GIMP Effects: Creative Techniques for Photographers, Artists, and Designers

  • ISBN13: 9781593271213
  • Notes: 100% Satisfaction Guarantee. Tracking provided on most orders. Buy with Confidence! Millions of books sold!

The GIMP, an image editor whose power and ease-of-use rivals that of Adobe Photoshop, is one of the world’s most popular free software projects. Artists and designers have relied on the GIMP since 1995 to retouch photographs, composite multiple images, and create new artwork from scratch. The Artist’s Guide to GIMP Effects shows you how to harness the GIMP’s powerful features to produce professional-looking advertisements, impressive photographic effects, as well as logos and text effects. And a

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Price: $ 20.94

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3 responses to “Adobe After Effects CC Reviews”

  1. Tim E Robertson "Publisher MyMac" Avatar
    Tim E Robertson “Publisher MyMac”
    34 of 35 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Neil Monks MyMac.com Review, December 17, 2007
    By 
    Tim E Robertson “Publisher MyMac” (Battle Creek, Mi United States) –
    (VINE VOICE)
      

    This review is from: The Artist’s Guide to GIMP Effects: Creative Techniques for Photographers, Artists, and Designers (Paperback)
    GIMP, or the GNU Image Manipulation Program to give it its proper name, is a graphics-editing program broadly similar to Adobe Photoshop in terms of functionality. The GIMP is an open source program that can be freely downloaded and installed on most computers, including maps. But on the downside it doesn’t come with a manual, so figuring out how to use GIMP can be tricky.

    But ‘The Artist’s Guide to GIMP Effects’ isn’t simply a book explaining what all the different tools and features do. Michael Hammel pitches this book quite a bit higher than that, focusing instead on how to use GIMP to perform a variety of useful and common tasks. From trick photography to building graphics for web sites, Hammel leads the reader expertly through nicely illustrated tutorials. The end result is more than simply a better understanding of the program, but a richer appreciation of what the program can be used to do.

    There are six chapters, the first of which introduces many of the basic concepts. Although there is some attention given to where the relevant tools are found and how to use them, the focus here is on what they do and why you need them. Fundamental to success with any graphics program is understanding how different tools work when applied together, and Hammel finishes off this chapter with a set of multi-function tutorials that underline this point.

    The second chapter concentrates on manipulating photographs. These include softening images, adding motion effects, and creating reflections. In each case the process is taken step-by-step, with clear text and relevant screenshots. At this point it’s also worth mentioning something about the layout of the book. No Starch has really done a good job here. The book is wider than it is tall, and each page holds two columns of text. The flexible binding lets the book stay open at any page. As a result, it’s an easy book to use alongside the computer.

    The next chapter is about creating artwork for web sites. These include things like tiles for web page backgrounds, buttons, tabs, and menu bars. The first tutorial in this batch is all about creating glossy, gel-like buttons of the type Macintosh users will be familiar with. One of the later tutorials looks at the ubiquitous rollover buttons, though from the perspective of creating the actual artwork required rather than the necessary JavaScript or CSS coding. That said, if you use a WYSIWYG web page layout program like Freeway, you probably won’t need to manually any of that sort of code to your page anyway; all you need are the graphics.

    Like all the other chapters, the web design chapter finishes with a collection of useful tips. Some of these should be required reading for any web designer, and it’s great to see the author lay them out fair and square.

    The fourth chapter is very unusual but actually makes a lot of sense. It’s a chapter devoted to creating advertising. While no substitute for a degree in marketing, there’s some great stuff here for anyone who needs to produce things like packaging and posters. Small businesses attracted to GIMP by its low cost will likely find this chapter worth the price of the book alone. On the other hand, some of the tutorials in this section are only incidentally useful for advertising purposes though, and could be just as relevant to anyone creating computer artwork. Again, there’s a wrap-up section with a slew of useful tips and tricks.

    Chapter five brings text into the mix. This chapter kicks off with some tutorials covering things like neon, metallic, and gel-like text, among other typographic effects.

    The last chapter is specifically for software developers, and illustrates the ways in which GIMP can be used to design and prototype application interfaces. While a clever and potentially useful chapter, what was obviously missing from this section of the book was something on designing icons for programs. The book then rounds off with a detailed index.

    For $45 this isn’t a cheap book, especially when you consider that GIMP itself is free and comes with its own online guides and tutorials. The question is whether having things laid out clearly and logically in a nicely illustrated book justifies the cost. In the opinion of this reviewer at least, the answer is yes. For the GIMP user looking to go beyond simply cropping and resizing digital images, this book is highly recommended.

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  2. Erik S. Heyl Avatar
    Erik S. Heyl
    10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Excellent hands on guide…, November 5, 2007
    By 
    Erik S. Heyl (Kitchener, Ontario Canada) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: The Artist’s Guide to GIMP Effects: Creative Techniques for Photographers, Artists, and Designers (Paperback)
    I bought this guide not knowing much about the Gimp and was pleasantly surprised. It covers the interface to start and does so in a way that gets you immediately using the Gimp. It also covers such things as photo retouching, drawing, painting, textures, creating advertising pieces and interfaces (i.e. for media players), graphics for the web (buttons, navigation, etc),web page layouts and the use of filters as tools.

    All this is covered in a relaxed, fun and practical style. If you want more than just a list of commands and want to UNDERSTAND why you do something, then this is the book for you.

    Highly recommended!

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  3. Diane Cipollo Avatar
    Diane Cipollo
    8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Project-based book has great examples, April 4, 2008
    By 
    Diane Cipollo (Editor at BellaOnline.com) –

    This review is from: The Artist’s Guide to GIMP Effects: Creative Techniques for Photographers, Artists, and Designers (Paperback)
    In my opinion, there can never be too many books like this one by Michael J. Hammel. This project-based book has great examples of how the graphic designer can use the GIMP software to get the job done. Each tutorial in this book is an individual project, allowing the reader to pick which tutorials best meets his or her needs. But read them all. Each technique is not presented in a vacuum. Hammel discusses these techniques in a way that prepares the readers to reproduce the results in their own projects.

    Besides being a project-based book, I also liked that Hammel did not waste the reader’s time, and his own, discussing every detail about each panel, menu command and keyboard shortcut. Instead, he commits those pages to more information that you can really use. Don’t get me wrong, he does give a short overview of the GIMP workspace in order to orient the novice to the software. But he does a good job of giving the readers only the information that they will need for the rest to the book.

    So what does Hammel cover in this book? He writes each project-based tutorial from the point-of-view of the graphic designer. He begins with a short description of the design criteria for the project and ends each tutorial with suggestions for other projects where the reader might apply these techniques. He divides the book into six chapters and each chapter covers a different area of graphic design. Once he covers the basics, he moves on to techniques for the photographer, web designer, advertising designer and UI designer. Throughout each chapter, he discusses how type applies to the project and he also devotes a chapter to type effects.

    For the photographer, he begins with some simple techniques for adding steam to a photo and creating a vignette. Then he covers more advanced techniques such as simulating depth of field. Have you ever wondered how graphic artists get type to look so good on top of any background? Hammel shows you how this is done, along with some other nice text effects. Also, he has one of the best techniques for converting a photo into a sketch that I have seen so far. His technique goes beyond the usual examples that you find in books and on the web.

    Moving from photography to web design, Hammel states that “color is king” on the web today. Only just a few years ago, books were preaching just the opposite. But now with the better monitors, Hammel can share some of his techniques for creating mood, simulating 3D and reflections, and “popping” an image. He also has some great techniques for creating folds from texture and gradients and for creating the popular Toon style.

    With the advent of widgets and other ways to create your own desktop applications, graphic designers are being asked to design user interfaces (GUI) for these applications. Hammel devotes the last section of his book to take you through the design process for creating a UI for a video player. He starts with the face plate and designs each part of the UI individually. However, these same techniques could be used to create environments for digital games and other design applications.

    Hammel has been working with GIMP from its beginnings in 1996. He has authored and co-authored many GIMP related books and articles.

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