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Bootcamp Introduction

Lesson 1 from: Adobe Photoshop CC Bootcamp

Blake Rudis

Bootcamp Introduction

Lesson 1 from: Adobe Photoshop CC Bootcamp

Blake Rudis

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Lesson Info

1. Bootcamp Introduction

Lessons

Class Trailer
1

Bootcamp Introduction

16:22
2

The Bridge Interface

13:33
3

Setting up Bridge

06:55
4

Overview of Bridge

11:29
5

Practical Application of Bridge

27:56
6

Introduction to Raw Editing

11:00
7

Setting up ACR Preferences & Interface

07:39
8

Global Tools Part 1

16:44
9

Global Tools Part 2

20:01
10

Local Tools

22:56
11

Introduction to the Photoshop Interface

07:13
12

Toolbars, Menus and Windows

25:07
13

Setup and Interface

11:48
14

Adobe Libraries

05:57
15

Saving Files

07:39
16

Introduction to Cropping

12:10
17

Cropping for Composition in ACR

04:44
18

Cropping for Composition in Photoshop

12:40
19

Cropping for the Subject in Post

03:25
20

Cropping for Print

07:34
21

Perspective Cropping in Photoshop

07:11
22

Introduction to Layers

08:42
23

Vector & Raster Layers Basics

05:05
24

Adjustment Layers in Photoshop

27:35
25

Organizing and Managing Layers

15:35
26

Introduction to Layer Tools and Blend Modes

21:34
27

Screen and Multiply and Overlay

09:15
28

Soft Light Blend Mode

07:34
29

Color and Luminosity Blend Modes

12:47
30

Color Burn and Color Dodge Blend Modes

07:43
31

Introduction to Layer Styles

11:43
32

Practical Application: Layer Tools

13:06
33

Introduction to Masks and Brushes

04:43
34

Brush Basics

09:22
35

Custom Brushes

04:01
36

Brush Mask: Vignettes

06:58
37

Brush Mask: Curves Dodge & Burn

06:53
38

Brush Mask: Hue & Saturation

07:52
39

Mask Groups

05:52
40

Clipping Masks

04:11
41

Masking in Adobe Camera Raw

07:06
42

Practical Applications: Masks

14:03
43

Introduction to Selections

05:42
44

Basic Selection Tools

17:41
45

The Pen Tool

11:56
46

Masks from Selections

04:22
47

Selecting Subjects and Masking

07:11
48

Color Range Mask

17:35
49

Luminosity Masks Basics

12:00
50

Introduction to Cleanup Tools

07:02
51

Adobe Camera Raw

10:16
52

Healing and Spot Healing Brush

14:56
53

The Clone Stamp Tool

10:20
54

The Patch Tool

06:38
55

Content Aware Move Tool

04:56
56

Content Aware Fill

06:46
57

Custom Cleanup Selections

15:42
58

Introduction to Shapes and Text

13:46
59

Text Basics

15:57
60

Shape Basics

07:00
61

Adding Text to Pictures

09:46
62

Custom Water Marks

14:05
63

Introduction to Smart Objects

04:37
64

Smart Object Basics

09:13
65

Smart Objects and Filters

09:05
66

Smart Objects and Image Transformation

10:57
67

Smart Objects and Album Layouts

11:40
68

Smart Objects and Composites

10:47
69

Introduction to Image Transforming

04:34
70

ACR and Lens Correction

09:45
71

Photoshop and Lens Correction

14:26
72

The Warp Tool

11:16
73

Perspective Transformations

20:33
74

Introduction to Actions in Photoshop

09:27
75

Introduction to the Actions Panel Interface

05:06
76

Making Your First Action

03:49
77

Modifying Actions After You Record Them

11:38
78

Adding Stops to Actions

04:01
79

Conditional Actions

07:36
80

Actions that Communicate

25:26
81

Introduction to Filters

04:38
82

ACR as a Filter

09:20
83

Helpful Artistic Filters

17:08
84

Helpful Practical Filters

07:08
85

Sharpening with Filters

07:32
86

Rendering Trees

08:20
87

The Oil Paint and Add Noise Filters

15:08
88

Introduction to Editing Video

06:20
89

Timeline for Video

08:15
90

Cropping Video

03:34
91

Adjustment Layers and Video

05:25
92

Building Lookup Tables

07:00
93

Layers, Masking Video & Working with Type

15:11
94

ACR to Edit Video

06:10
95

Animated Gifs

11:39
96

Introduction to Creative Effects

06:08
97

Black, White, and Monochrome

18:05
98

Matte and Cinematic Effects

08:23
99

Gradient Maps and Solid Color Grades

12:20
100

Gradients

04:21
101

Glow and Haze

10:23
102

Introduction to Natural Retouching

05:33
103

Brightening Teeth

10:25
104

Clean Up with the Clone Stamp Tool

08:07
105

Cleaning and Brightening Eyes

16:58
106

Advanced Clean Up Techniques

24:47
107

Introduction to Portrait Workflow & Bridge Organization

14:47
108

ACR for Portraits Pre-Edits

21:27
109

Portrait Workflow Techniques

18:46
110

Introduction to Landscape Workflow & Bridge Organization

12:17
111

Landscape Workflow Techniques

37:36
112

Introduction to Compositing & Bridge

06:59
113

Composite Workflow Techniques

34:01
114

Landscape Composite Projects

24:14
115

Bonus: Rothko and Workspace

05:15
116

Bonus: Adding Textures to Photos

07:05
117

Bonus: The Mask (Extras)

05:18
118

Bonus: The Color Range Mask in ACR

04:54

Lesson Info

Bootcamp Introduction

We've got a lot to cover, we've got a lot of awesome stuff to cover. And I guess the first thing I have to ask, and if you're sitting at home, has anyone ever been to bootcamp? Actually been to bootcamp. Okay so we got one in here, so I've been to bootcamp. This is my bootcamp from 2002. And it took me a long time to find myself here because we all have the same mean mug, but I found myself by my ears. There we are, right here. Cool, so that's me at bootcamp. There's a reason why I like the fact that we put this course together and we called it Bootcamp. The word bootcamp, the name Bootcamp, and as the name Bootcamp implies, especially if you've ever been to bootcamp. Bootcamp is one of those things that everyone goes into bootcamp with all of these predisposed notions of life and how they grew up and how they were raised down to how they folded their clothes and what their family life was like. And everyone goes into bootcamp with their hair the way it was, their clothes they way they...

were, and then pretty much get shaved, everyone looks the same, you all get the same clothes, and you get built back up from the base level all the way up to who you're gonna become in the military in that military capacity. Now we aren't in the military at this point, but why I like the term bootcamp specifically for this course is that I'm not gonna shave your head, but the point is is that, I want you to take this and think about it as you're learning Photoshop from the bare basics and working your way up through to the point that you're gonna learn how to fold your clothes, so to speak, a little bit differently than you did before when you were working with Photoshop after seeing this course. The way this course has been designed has been designed specifically to do that. To break you down to what we call parade rest in the military, and build you back up to the person that you're gonna be using Photoshop. I'm not gonna yell at ya, I'm not gonna scream at ya. I could, I could throw my best TI voice on, as I do this, but nobody would learn anything that way. So we aren't gonna do that. Here's an overview of just what we're gonna do today. And talk about, especially on this presentation. We're gonna talk about the endless learning curve of Photoshop, we're gonna talk about what to expect from and throughout this course, and we're also gonna talk about the three main parts that build Photoshop and what Photoshop's foundation is built upon. Photoshop is an endless learning curve. You've probably heard the fact that Photoshop does have a huge learning curve before. No pun intended, there are curves in there. That was a bad, bad Photoshop joke. (laughing) But the Photoshop learning curve is huge. And this can be a daunting thing. When you are going into this, whether it's client based work, landscape work, not matter what work it is that you're gonna be doing with your photographs, the idea of taking on a program like Photoshop can be very daunting. It's kinda like this, it's kinda like when you think about your existence, let's go a little bit off here, when you think about your existence and who we are on this planet standing right here, we seem so minuscule and we have this huge vast universe around us. Photoshop is the universe of photo editing. It literally is. So if you try to think about even one small little part within Photoshop, if you try to think about the whole spectrum of Photoshop in one fell swoop, you're probably gonna fall. You're gonna fall down, it's gonna knock you out because there's just too much that's going on it. So you have to think about things in their individual levels and build your way back down from that universal view down to your view to see how you exist within this entire universe. It's the same thing with Photoshop. If you think about Photoshop as this vast program, you're never gonna understand and you're never gonna get it. But when we break it down and we look at the individual little teeny tiny parts, it becomes a lot easier. This is not something I want you to be intimidated by by any stretch of the imagination. I want you to be excited about this. This is something that it is to be excited about. There are many programs and many plugins out there, but the reason why Photoshop is my favorite is I'm still learning. You might think that I'm standing here teaching you, so I must know everything about Photoshop and I'm gonna be the first one to raise my hand right now and say even though I've developed this entire course that's over 400 hours put into this, I still don't think I know everything about Photoshop. As a matter of fact, I'd say probably, I may only know 60, maybe 65%. And that's great, I like that. I'm excited by that. I'm not intimidated by that. And every time I jump into Photoshop I teach myself something new. So I'm just gonna give you a basic timeline of how I started. And I'm not doing this because I want to fluff my feathers, because everyone is in a different chapter of their life, especially when it comes to something like Photoshop, they're in a different chapter of where they are with Photoshop, and I just wanna show you where my timeline began and where it's ended with Photoshop, so you get an idea of how long it's taken me to grasp these concepts. But the point is, I don't want you to look at this timeline and be like, "20 years? "I don't wanna be here for 20 years." That's the point, I'm gonna expedite this process for you so you don't have to be here for 20 years. So in 1998 I got my first version of Photoshop, it was Photoshop 5, long before they put the SC in front of it. I was all self-taught. I was basically probably doing illegal things by putting my face on dollar bills. But that's what we all do when we first get Photoshop. We come up with different ways we can make a self portrait. I might have handed them out as business cards too, but that's neither here nor there. I was 18, come on. 2002, I took my first course in Photoshop. Actually four years went by of me thinking I knew everything about Photoshop and that I wasn't gonna learn anything from a digital printmaking course in college. And I was wildly wrong. I learned how to mask four years after jumping into it and trying to teach myself for the first time. Then 2006, I started to, after college, I started to really do a lotta landscape work. I moved to the California coast, so I was doing a lotta things with my landscape images that I would then turn into paintings. And so I started trying to tweak the things in Photoshop to get an ideal look at what my painting would look like, but still I wasn't that great in Photoshop. 2010 I went to Photoshop World. So here's that's 12 years difference. That's a big gap. But I thought, I said you know what, when I go to this place, these guys can't teach me anything. I know 95% of Photoshop. I walked in there thinking I was the bees' knees and I walked outta there know 5% of nothing about Photoshop. They taught me better practices, they taught me better ways, and that is where I said, you know what, I'm gonna dig into this program full heartedly. 12 years of working with Photoshop before I decided that I really knew nothing about it. So I started a blog. That's what you do, right? (laughing) 2011, I dug even a little bit deeper and figured well, the next step is let me just make a YouTube channel about this, because YouTube people, they'll tell you right away when you're doing something wrong. (laughing) So I learned a lot better practices from them as well. This whole path of Photoshop enlightenment, so to speak. 2013, I started writing some books, developed some courses, and that's when Photoshop started becoming a second language for me. That was 15 years. Now, this is speckled with a little bit of formal education, and a lot of self-teaching. Whereas if you're watching this course right now, you're in a much better place than Blake was within that 15 years. You have the desire to learn this in a way that you're going to take a course that is going to teach you everything about Photoshop from the bare basics. And that's exactly what you're gonna need so that you don't have that 15 year gap. That's the whole point is I do not want you to take 15 years to get to this point. It's ridiculous. It was just my stubbornness of not wanting to take an official course on Photoshop. So in 2015, I learned CSS and HTML coding from one of my friends and I started developing panels for Photoshop that would help me speed up my workflow. At this point, Photoshop is not just a second language, it's like I'm getting really fluent in Photoshop. 2017, went a little overboard, have three panels now that I've developed, now presently, I guess I feel comfortable enough right now to be teaching you this on the set of Creative Live. So this has been 20 years of Photoshop experience and I'm still learning. I'm still learning Photoshop. And every day, every day is a school day in Photoshop Land. Because every single time I open Photoshop, and I always leave time to experiment set aside from my normal, day to day stuff. Every time I got into experimentation zone, I go, oh, I never knew that. That's awesome. I'm gonna write that down. And then I end up teaching it in some form or fashion. So even though you might think 20 years of all that experience, even HTML and CSS coding panels for Photoshop, this guy must know all the stuff about Photoshop, and I can humbly tell you that no I do not. And that's exciting for me. And even you sitting here can probably tell me something that you do in Photoshop that don't necessarily do, because we go beyond the practicality of a tool, and we go into the technical uses of it, and the technique of it, more specifically. And some people have some phenomenal techniques. So some best practices. So now you're probably thinking, "Great, now I got 20 years, awesome. "It's gonna take me 20 years to do this, right?" That's not the case. You have to break it down into those small parts. Again, if we think about this universally, you'll be stunted, you'll be stifled and you will not want to continue. So I encourage you to break it down into smaller parts. Actually, that's how we've designed this course into the smallest parts to build its way up. And I recommend that when you see these small parts, you take two weeks for each one of them. Two whole weeks. So I know that you've got client based stuff and you might have your landscape stuff, whatever it is that you do in your business, you say I can't take two weeks to do that, Blake. And I say I know, I can't either. But I know that if I set aside at least one to two hours per day for two whole weeks, even if that means sacrificing some sleep, that by the end of that two weeks, I will know that part really darn well. And then if I start incorporating them into my workflow, it becomes second nature. Then grab another topic, two whole weeks, during your experimentation time. Everyone can take an hour, it's just like working out. Working out is a discipline. If you set aside that time to work out, it becomes a part of your life. If you set aside that time to experiment, it becomes a part of your life. I want you to develop a workflow here and not, this is important, not a random access of functions. Because Photoshop can very easily become a random access of functions. And what I mean by that is, oh yeah, I know how to use the clone stamp tool well, but I don't use anything else in Photoshop. Photoshop has a lot of cool stuff in it that you can use. When you develop a workflow around it, you have everything at your disposal to work on, and you're not just going in there for a random access of functions. So what are we gonna expect during this course? This is four whole weeks of Photoshop. As we said in the beginning of this, this is 20 days, it's broken down into days. If you look at the way these weeks have been built along this course, we're gonna be covering some very basic things here in week one. Then we're gonna go into Photoshop intermediate tasks. Then we're gonna get advanced. And then I'm gonna show full workflows and ways that you can create your own creative effects by week four. So if we look at week one, this is the intro, right now. Then we're gonna go ahead and talk about Bridge. Adobe Camera Raw's gonna be next. Then the Photoshop interface, breaking down the interface, bit by bit, part by part, to set you up so that workflow becomes something conducive for you in Photoshop and you maximize the real estate that's on your screen. Cropping, you'd be surprised how much you can learn about cropping and how important cropping is for our images. Then we're gonna get into layers. Week two, layer tools. That's a really fun one. We build up on layers. Now layers, if you see there, we're not gonna talk about anything to deal with opacity or Blend If, or layer styles, that's all gonna happen in layer tools. And then when we're talking about layer tools, we aren't gonna talk about masks until masks need to be talked about. Just the brush painted mask. Then we're gonna get into selections. And break down how we can use masks with selections with layer tools with layers, and it's all just like a children's storybook of continuation, of things just building up as it goes. Then cleanup tools. Ways that we can cleanup our images and still maintain the integrity of that photograph. And then talk about shapes and text, and how that's really important for photographers. By week three we're gonna get into some more advanced things. Smart objects, transforming and warping our images, actions, automated workflow happening right there, just by the click of a button, just by pressing play in Photoshop. Filters and how those filters are both practical and artistic and which filters you need to use and when. And editing video, that's a really fun topic that we don't often realize we can do in Photoshop, but in my business I know I edit video quite a bit. We can do some really cool things by editing video. By week four, we're gonna get into custom effects, natural portrait retouching, portrait workflows, there's gonna be a whole workflow where, what you see in this last three is really exciting for me, this is awesome because what we're gonna do in these last three is we're gonna go back through all of this stuff that we talked about here and build it up into composite workflow, landscape workflow, portrait workflow, and circle all of this stuff into here. So you're gonna learn all the basics of all these tools, and then by the time you get to here, you're gonna see how all of it comes together. From Adobe, from Bridge, from Adobe Camera Raw, from culling my images in Bridge and to Adobe Camera Raw for basic editings, and then jumping into Photoshop for those more advanced things. And we're gonna finish it up with some of the most difficult things like compositing. Or moving a subject from one image, placing it on the background of another image, and even, maybe even talking about some things like replacing skies in there too. At the end of all this, I've created a panel specifically for this. I talk about panels, and I've created a panel for this Creative Live bootcamp. So that, I don't want you to cheat with this, I want you to learn all the stuff throughout the course, but this is automated, it's like a workflow machine. You push buttons and it does things. Especially when it comes to things like Blend If, can can be really confusing, this is a push button Blend If, really responsive, awesome things that you could do with those layers. When I say push button, I don't want you to think that it's a series of presets, because I'm not a preset man. I like to set you up with a workflow, and have you modify those layers that get built within that workflow, rather than you think that, okay, if I push this button I'm gonna get an image that looks like Blake. No, I wouldn't do that anyway. Because you're an artist, and I don't want you to look like mine, I want you to have your own style. So I want you to think about Photoshop now, what I want you to get to, is think about Photoshop and your learning as a car manufacturing plant. At a car manufacturing plant, you've got a foreman that is somewhere at the end of the line, or the supervisor that is operating around that line. And on that line you might have a person who's whole job is to put one bolt on the trunk. And then you have another person who puts one bolt on the hood. And then another person who puts the wheels on the right hand side of the car. And then another person on the other side that puts the wheels on the left hand side of the car. And then the person at the very end puts the windshield on, so that by the time that car goes from the very beginning to the very end, it's done. Now, it probably takes a lot more than five people to do that, but... (laughing) If for some reason this individual gets sick. The foreman can't necessarily jump in there and do that, because he might not know what that person's job is. But he knows the person to call on. So that space can get filled. So the job can continue to get going. How does this related to Photoshop? Well, the foreman essentially would be the person who knows what tool to kinda go to in Photoshop, but doesn't necessarily know how to use it. And then each one of those individual people on the line would essentially be a different thing that happens within Photoshop. So my goal here is for you not to, is for you to no longer be the foreman of Photoshop. I want you to know all these tools, so that instead of just, oh well, yeah, I know that I can do that with that tool, but I don't really know how to use it, lemme go consult with X, Y, Z to figure that out. I want you to understand and know these tools so that you're not in a position where you look at it and you're just like I wish I could do that, but I can't. So I'm just not going to. That's not the case, I don't want that to be like that at all.

Class Materials

Bonus Materials with Purchase

Photoshop Bootcamp Plug-In
Textures
Clouds
Painted Backgrounds
1 – Intro to Photoshop Bootcamp
6 – Intro to Raw Editing.zip
11 – Interface and Setup
16 – Intro to Cropping and Composition.zip
22 – Intro to Layers.zip
26 – Intro to Layer Tools.zip
43 – Intro to Selections.zip
50 – Intro to Cleanup Tools.zip
58 – Intro to Shapes and Text.zip
63 – Intro to Smart Objects.zip
69 – Intro to Image Transforming.zip
74 – Intro to Actions.zip
81 – Filters.zip
88 – Intro to Editing Video.zip
96 – Custom Effects.zip
102 – Natural Retouching.zip
107 – Intro to Portrait Workflow.pdf
110 – Intro to Landscape Workflow.zip
112 – Intro to Compositing.zip
115 – Rothko and Interfaces (Bonus Video).zip
33 – Intro to Masks and Brushes.zip
106 - Frequency Separation.zip

Ratings and Reviews

a Creativelive Student
 

Amazing course, but don't be fooled into thinking this is a beginner's course for photographers. The problem isn't Blake's explanations; they're top. The problem is the vast scope of this course and the order in which the topics are presented. Take layers for example. When I was first learning Photoshop (back when we learned from books), I found I learned little or nothing from, for example, books that covered layers before they covered how to improve/process photographs. These books taught me how to organize, move, and link layers before they showed me what a layer was actually for. Those books tended to teach me everything there is to know about layers (types of layers, how to organize them, how to move them, how to move them two at a time, how to move them two at a time even if there are other layers between the two you're interested in, useful troubleshooting tips, etc. ) all before I even know (from a photographer's point of view) what it is the things actually do. The examples of organizing, linking, and moving mean everything for graphic designers from Day One, but for photographers not so much. Blake does the same thing as those books. Topics he covers extremely early demand a lot of theoretical imagination for a photographer who doesn't already know quite a bit about what he is talking about. Learning about abstract things first and concrete things later only makes PS that much harder to understand. If you AREN'T a beginner, however, this course is amazing. I thought it would be like an Army Bootcamp, taking you from zero and building you into a fit, competent Photoshop grunt. Now I think it's more like Army Bootcamp for high school varsity jocks. It isn't going to take you from the beginning, but the amount you'll get out of it is nonetheless more than your brain can imagine. I've been using PS for years to improve my photographs, and even to create the odd artistic composite or two. The amount I've learned in the first week is amazing, and every day I learn something -- more like many things -- which I immediately implement to improve my productivity and/or widen the horizons of what I can achieve. If you ARE a photographer who's a Photoshop beginner, I'd take very seriously the advice Blake gives in the introduction: Watch one lesson, and practice the skills and principles you learn in that one lesson for two weeks. THEN watch the next lesson. You can't do that of course without buying the course, so it's up to you to decide whether you'd like to learn Photoshop and master Photoshop all from the same course. Learning it first and mastering it later will cost more money, but I think you'll understand everything better and have a much more enjoyable ride in the process. As for me? I'm going to have to find the money to buy this course. There is simply way too much content in each lesson for me to try to take on all at once, but on the other hand I don't want to miss anything at all that he has to share.

Robert Andrews
 

Blake Rudis is the absolute best in teaching photoshop. His knowledge and how he presents the instruction is clear and concise - there is NO ONE BETTER. Yes, his classes require some basic skills, and maybe I'd organize the order of (or group) the classes in a different order, but, let me be clear - if anyone is to be successful or famous in the Photoshop world, it should be Blake Rudis. I strongly recommend his teaching. I started photography and post processing in 2018, and because of this class, I'm know what Im doing. The energy you get when you create something beautiful is profound, it makes you bounce out of bed (at 4AM) like a 5 year old, to go create. It's a great ride! Thanks Blake, & Thanks Creative live.

Esther Gambrell
 

WOW!!! I've been purchasing CL classes for several years now and have watched HOURS of "How-To Photoshop" classes, but this is the first one I've actually purchased because of the AWESOME BONUS content!!! SERIOUSLY??!!?!? A PLUG-IN??? But not only that, Blake is SO easy to understand, and he breaks down concepts in different ways to connect with different people's learning styles. I REALLY appreciated this approach because I am a LEFT-BRAINED creative that has an engineering background, so I really connected to what Blake was saying. THANK YOU FOR THAT! There are TONS of Photoshop courses out there, but I found this one to be the most helpful in they way Blake teaches concepts so that you know WHY you're doing what your doing. I feel like he taught me how to fish with Photoshop to feed me for a lifetime instead of just giving me a fish to feed me for one day. This is the BEST overall PS course out there!!! Thank you!!!!

Student Work

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