Archive for December, 2009

Photo Shop Training – What the Easiest Way to Learn Is!

December 22nd, 2009



So you want to know what the easiest way is to learn Photo Shop.  I can tell you right away what it is.

It is learning by watching it being done.  It is learning by photo shop tutorials.  Seeing what is being done and being able to follow along is so much easier than trying to read directions and figure out what your doing.

By seeing on screen what is happening, you get the exact steps, where everything is, what buttons to push, how to use the different features, find out where all these buttons are located,  see what the shortcut keys are and much more.

You are able to learn  a lot faster than going through all the written directions that are provided by the software manufacturer. 

You can search for different parts of what you want to learn about.  If you do that, then there is the problem of putting it all together in the right order.

This can take days and even weeks.  Most of all it will be so frustrating that you will probably give up.

By watching how a photo shop image is changed by someone else you will get a much better understanding of what is going on. 

It would be a shame to have this great software just sitting on your hard drive collecting dust and not being used.  Once you are able to accomplish a photo shop design there is not telling what someone will come up with.

My suggestion is to find a training video course.

By: Rex R.

How To Start An Online Business Selling Your Digital Photos

December 21st, 2009
Photography, a few years back was restricted to just a hobby or a passion nurtured by many. Today, it is a full-fledged profession for making one’s living. With the foray of high-tech cameras with advanced resolution and pixels, photography has turned better and much bigger than just a past time. Today, there is a vast market thriving for talented photographers to exhibit and get paid for their digital photographs in the wide arena of Internet, meaning that you can literally start an online business using only Digital PhotosHere’s how you can make money online from your digital photos:

Submit your digital photographs online at photography stocking sites like, iStockphoto, Stockexpert, Fotolia, Crestock and Dreamstime. iStockphoto etc. These sites give a platform to photographers from across the world to store their art work and exhibit them to a potential range of online consumers. These web sites directly showcase your photograph to people who are interested in art form like interior designers, web designers, advertisers’ et al, instead of all and sundry. Most of these web sites do not charge any membership fees; however, there may be a few exceptions. The point to note is that these web sites maintain a high standard in their art intakes. So, anything less than their level would be liable for rejection. » Read more: How To Start An Online Business Selling Your Digital Photos

A Revolutionary Art Movement – Dadaism

December 21st, 2009



War brings about a multitude of reactions in different people, to the artists of the early twentieth century it came in the form of a sense of rebellion. The forceful creative disillusionment, in especially a group of artists, led to the start of an art movement, ‘Dadaism.’

The First World War, mainly between 1916 and 1920, witnessed the rise of ‘Dadaism.’ In 1916, a German, exiled poet, Hugo Ball, set up Cabaret Voltaire, a cafe, in Zurich, Switzerland, where artists, musicians, and writers frequented. The cafe became an abode for unhindered artistic expression and the exchange of ideas, amidst the prevailing feelings of anti-war, running through a large cross section of society. Against this backdrop, ‘Dadaism’ began as an artistic protest, countering the barbaric nature of war. ‘Dada’ is a French word meaning ‘hobbyhorse.’ ‘Dadaism’ was the name chosen, as a paper-knife was found inserted in a dictionary, pointing to the word ‘Dada.’ ‘Dadaism’ thereon became a signatory of the attitudes and beliefs leading to war.

Owing to their revolutionary disposition, ‘Dadaists’ did not conform to the traditional values of art. They aimed to destroy the philosophy and the prevailing materialism & consumerism in the society, which they held morally responsible for rooting the events catalyzing the World War I. Therefore, ‘Dadaist’ works reflected chaos, randomness, and destruction to illustrate the confusion prevailing during this period, thereby attempting to shock, & aware people about this malaise. These artists used materials, such as trash from streets and ready-made items, to signify the unemployment of artisans owing to the war and to the up surging importance of machines over human resource. ‘Dadaism’ was abstract, spontaneous, and creatively absurd to quite an extent.

Marcel Duchamp, a founder of ‘Dadaism’ used humor in this serious artistry. His “Bicycle Wheel (1913),” had a bicycle placed upside down on a kitchen stool, while in “L.H.O.O.Q.,” he painted Mona Lisa with a mustache, to shock the art world. Max Ernst, another ‘Dadaist,’ employed revulsion to dig on the moral consciousness of public. His “Battle of the Fish (1917),” depicts the nerves of a fish as the vibrations of da, da. Other notable ‘Dadaists’ were Francis Picabia, Man Ray, and Beatrice Wood.

‘Dadaism’ was not restricted only to the field of visual arts, but also extended to literature, theatre, and graphic design. The ‘Dadaist’ musicians evolved ethnic chants coupled with a large drum as their style of music. The performers, with black faces, conveyed a structure less and the order less style of ‘Dadaism.’ The movement slowly declined by the late 1920s, with most of its torchbearers transitioning to ‘Surrealism,’ ‘Socialist Realism,’ and the other forms of ‘Modernism.’

By: Annette Labedzki