Monday, July 5, 2010

The Party is a blast!

Party:
Wow, we sure did a lot of fun on the fourth July webo party, and Pterry is giving some trivia unscramble questions! the correct first answer is get a coin code! i got a code, but unfortunately i giving them away in chat and Ldude or someone like that got them! also, check out the cave winners! Psst, i got a special note:

Contest:
YO NOBODY enter my art contest, so i give a special contest! Tell me how to use adobe photoshop and i will give you exactly 2 coin codes!!!!!!!! remember, just comment and tell me your email so i can send it to you!!!!

2 comments:

  1. Try bannersnack.com for banners.

    Here's some info on cropping from Adobe...

    When you resize an image and resample it, you change the amount of data in that image.To resample your image, ensure Resample Image is checked at the bottom of the Image Size dialog box. Resample is on by default.

    Resampling changes the total n umber of pixels in the image, which are displayed as Width and Height in pixels in the Image Size dialog box in the Pixel Dimensions section. When you increase the number of pixels in this section of the dialog box (upsampling), the application adds data to the image, and when you decrease the number of pixels (downsampling), the application removes data. Whenever data is removed from or added to the image, the image quality degrades to some extent. Removal of data from an image is usually preferable to the addition of data, because upsamping requires that Photoshop or Photoshop Elements guess which pixels to add; this is a more complex procedure than guessing which pixels to remove, when you downsample. You will get the best results working with images that you bring into Photoshop in the proper resolution for the output you want. You may get the results you need by resizing your image without resampling. However, if you need to resample your images, you'll want to do so only once.

    When you check, or turn on, Resample, you can change any or all of the three values in the Image Size dialog box: pixel dimensions, physical size, or resolution. If you change one value, then you will effect the others; the pixel dimensions are always affected.

    * If you change the pixel dimensions, then you will affect the physical size, but not the resolution.
    * If you change the resolution, then you will affect the pixel dimensions, but not the physical size.
    * If you change the physical size, then you will change the pixel dimensions, but not the resolution.

    You cannot set the file size; it changes when you change the total amount of data in the image (the pixel dimensions). If you note the file size value before you change the other values in the dialog box, then you can use the file size information to understand how much data will be removed or added to your image when you resample the image. For example, if the file size changes from 250 KB to 500 KB, you'll be adding twice as much data to the image, which may seriously degrade the image. Degraded images may look blurry, or jagged or blocky.

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  2. To take screen shots...

    1. Press and hold Ctrl+Alt+Prnt Scrn
    2. Paste it into a program of your choice
    3. Save it as a picture
    4. Use it as you wish!

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