Deke's Techniques 222: Creating a Protective Aura around Your 2D Character
Deke creates a glowing aura around his 2D game character to protect it from wizards, drones, and other annoying people

News Flash: B/C No Longer Suckz

Recently, a few of you expressed mild to moderate surprise that I resorted to Brightness/Contrast to fix an image in the Lab mode. (See this and this.) So I figured I'd run an article that I wrote about a year ago for Photoshop User magazine. Okay, so it's a repurpose, but this version appears as I submitted it, headline and all. By which I mean, with a couple of hours of updating with the denizens of deke.com in mind. Anyway, here goes:

Ask a group of Photoshop experts to name the worst function in all of Photoshop and you’ll probably get a variety of answers: Defringe (doesn’t work), Dust & Scratches (removes neither), Pattern Maker (doesn’t work), Edit > Menus (removing commands doesn't simplify the program), or my personal antifavorite, the sharpen tool (takes a perfectly good image and makes it look like it was rendered in iron filings). But I think you’ll find a fair amount of consensus around what has traditionally been the most notorious image destroyer in all of Photoshop, Brightness/Contrast.

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If Ever My Life Seems Glamorous

Then just read this, and that misperception will go away.

Oh, and before you go any farther, no info to impart. This is pure screed. I don't screed lightly, so this is a good one, but still.

Kinda long, too. And it begins like so:

Make Me Hertz

Oh, hey, nice graphic. Car rental company, plus my suggestion for a new tagline. Catchy + really super accurate. I also considered "Make me" followed by their supremely ugly corporate logo. There's so much you can do with "Hertz." Please, suggest your favorite. And never rent from them. I hate them so. Read more » 

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Creating Anchored Comments in InDesign

More and more of my graphically inclined authors are choosing the option to create their chapters in InDesign. Problem is, InDesign doesn't (really) have the two things an editor needs to communicate effectively within the document during the editing process: trackable changes and efficient comments. For the latter, there's the Notes palette, but unfortunately that hasn't improved since we learned to hack it into CS2. It still has an impossibly hard-to-select reference point and a weird sense of order. (If you are still using InDesign CS2 and would like to know how to get the Notes palette, check out this InDesign Secret.) I came up with a system for creating comments with anchored objects that the dekeTeam is still using today, even after the Notes palette became a regular cast member in CS3, because my anchored comment system works better. Here's how we do it. (Oh, and I'm using a draft of the upcoming Illustrator One-on-One book so you're getting a miniscule sneak peak here for what it's worth. Nothing but the best for you people.)

By the way, as far as tracked changes goes, yes, I know about InCopy. I've used the InCopy plugin effectively, but it adds another layer of complexity (and another $250 a person to the process). I've actually had authors simply tell me it wasn't going to happen. InCopy seems ideal for collaboration in real-time, say, on a magazine project, but in the book world, chapters go linearly to each person and we rarely work across the same server, which ultimately makes InCopy more cumbersome than it needs to be. What I really need is to be able to track changes, a la InCopy, in the regular old InDesign Story Editor. I've whined about this incessantly to Michael Ninness, our beloved friend and InDesign Product Manager. I truly believe he'll make sure it happens one day, just to shut me up. Read more » 

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Picked up a Couple of Awards

Imagine my delight when I got these puppies in the mail. The ostentatious one on the right is a Hermes Creative Award, the streamlined one on the left (coldly rejecting Hermes) is a Telly. They're both for my video series Photoshop CS3 Sharpening Images, which has picked up a total of four industry awards for my publisher, lynda.com. Look, even Bugs is excited.

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Join Us at Photoshop World, Free

Well, free once you get yourself to Las Vegas, baby. But if you are going to be in or around Sin City on September 5th or 6th, come by the O'Reilly booth at Photoshop World and say hi. Print out the attached pass for free entry for two to the expo floor. Although you won't be able to attend Deke's world-famous sessions without a full pass (which you can learn about here), there's plenty to do and learn on the expo floor. (In fact, NAPP, Microsoft, and Nikon all have theaters where many of our friends hold on-the-floor sessions.) Deke will be appearing in the booth for an interview with O'Reilly Evangelist, Derrick Story. (I'll post the time here once we finalize the schedule.) Although as you know, Deke is quite shy and retiring, he's also very much in love with his fans. Especially you fabulous people. I'll be there too, doing my booth duty, so definitely introduce yourself as a beloved inhabitant of dekeVille.

Click on the image below to download the pass. Then print. Then come. If it could be simpler, let us know.

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