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Al Tucker

Using the Color Wheel: Color Theory Tips for Artists and Painters - 0 views

  • There are three Primary Colors which are the most important. These colors are of course Red, Blue, and Yellow. If you’re an oil painter, you can get any other color you need just by mixing red, blue, and yellow oil paint. It’s not always easy, however, since no tube of paint contains purely one color. All of them have traces of other colors as well.
  • Warm Colors go from Yellow to Red on the color wheel, and will appear to visually come forward in artwork, towards the viewer. No matter the innate color of an object, under bright light or heat (like the noonday sun) an entire scene can actually be colored completely by warm hues.
Al Tucker

No Stupid Questions with Colin Smith - Cleaning Up Illustrator Live Trace | Adobe TV - 0 views

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    Good video on creating clean results with Live Trace using both Illustrator and Photoshop in tandem!
Al Tucker

Illustrator CS5 Video Tutorials | The Toolbar - The Mac Lab - 0 views

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    Mike Skocko's great tutorial series that he uses with his students.
Al Tucker

YouTube - ‪ctrlpainter's Channel‬‏ - 0 views

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    Ctrl+Paint Digital Painting Channel - great array of videos to help us understand methods for working with painting techniques in Photoshop.
Joey Hudson

The Web Genious - 2 views

shared by Joey Hudson on 31 Aug 10 - Cached
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    It's like 20 questions
Al Tucker

A Brief History of Typography | Typography | Graphic Design & Publishing Center - 0 views

  • This is a post by Thomas W. Phinney in a 1995 altcomp news group http://learning.north.londonmet.ac.uk/epoc/typhis.htm and we reprint it here for nonprofit educational purposes, and to protect it in the event the link goes dead. With Mr. Phinney's permission, we have taken the liberty of enhancing the texts by adding links where appropriate, and updating links that were used in another transcription, but had gone dead. No changes were made to the original content other than those noted.       Throughout the text you can hover over the "*" asterisks following a word or passage to see a definition, or click on the asterisks link for a fuller description. Fonts and major names links will take you to pages for those items.
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