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Brandon Cole Photography

Posted: October 2nd, 2020 | Author: | Filed under: Design, Really Cool Stuff | Tags: | No Comments »

Dallas based photographer with a passion for analog cameras and alternative processes. 

Branddon Cole Photography

Brandon is a good friend of CreativePublic, show this up and coming photographer some love! – Jason V.

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Photoshop Actions – Cartoon Effects!

Posted: April 6th, 2020 | Author: | Filed under: Design, Resources | Tags: , , | No Comments »
Comic photo filter
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Cool Tools for Editing Your Photos

Posted: March 5th, 2020 | Author: | Filed under: Design, Resources, Software | Tags: , | No Comments »
Photo editing tools

CreativePublic has partnered with Fix The Photo to offer our members discounted photo editing tools and restoration services. Here are a few options below to review:

Use this link for discounted products and services:
https://fixthephoto.com/creativepublic

Lightroom Presets
https://fixthephoto.com/creativepublic/matte-collection-lrp

Photo Editing
https://fixthephoto.com/creativepublic/retouching-services

Photoshop Textures
https://fixthephoto.com/creativepublic/hand-painted-textures

Photo Restoration
https://fixthephoto.com/creativepublic/damaged-restoration-package


Adventure Photography: 4 Tips to Get an Epic Shot | Get Out: A Guide to Adventure

Posted: September 24th, 2019 | Author: | Filed under: Resources | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

Lectures on Digital Photography

Posted: August 11th, 2019 | Author: | Filed under: Free Stuff, Really Cool Stuff, Resources | Tags: , | No Comments »

Instructor: Marc Levoy

An introduction to the scientific, artistic, and computing aspects of digital photography. Topics include lenses and optics, light and sensors, optical effects in nature, perspective and depth of field, sampling and noise, the camera as a computing platform, image processing and editing, and computational photography. We will also survey the history of photography, look at the work of famous photographers, and talk about composing strong photographs.

This course is based on CS 178 (Digital Photography), which I taught at Stanford from 2009 through 2014. I revised and taught the course again at Google in Spring of 2016, and these web pages are from the Google version. The course consists of 18 lectures. The topics, with dates, are given in the course schedule. The lectures were delivered live on Google’s Mountain View campus, broadcast live to Google offices around the world, and recorded for later playback.  The videos linked into these web pages are from those recordings, edited slightly to remove discussion of Google internal projects. Keynote slides from these lectures were converted to PDF files and linked into the schedule after each lecture.

I am making these materials freely available, but some of the photographs included in the lectures are individually copyrighted. It should be fine for teachers to re-use this material under fair use, but other uses may be protected. If you re-use the material in substantially the same form it is given here, I would appreciate an acknowledgement.

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FREE – Lectures on Digital Photography

Posted: April 29th, 2017 | Author: | Filed under: Free Stuff, Resources | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

How cameras work and how to take good pictures using them. Instructor: Marc Levoy

Course description

An introduction to the scientific, artistic, and computing aspects of digital photography. Topics include lenses and optics, light and sensors, optical effects in nature, perspective and depth of field, sampling and noise, the camera as a computing platform, image processing and editing, and computational photography. We will also survey the history of photography, look at the work of famous photographers, and talk about composing strong photographs.

This course is based on CS 178 (Digital Photography), which I taught at Stanford from 2009 through 2014. I revised and taught the course again at Google in Spring of 2016, and these web pages are from the Google version. The course consists of 18 lectures. The topics, with dates, are given in the course schedule. The lectures were delivered live on Google’s Mountain View campus, broadcast live to Google offices around the world, and recorded for later playback.  The videos linked into these web pages are from those recordings, edited slightly to remove discussion of Google internal projects. Keynote slides from these lectures were converted to PDF files and linked into the schedule after each lecture.

I am making these materials freely available, but some of the photographs included in the lectures are individually copyrighted. It should be fine for teachers to re-use this material under fair use, but other uses may be protected. If you re-use the material in substantially the same form it is given here, I would appreciate an acknowledgement.

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