On Fri, Aug 6, 2010 at 1:08 PM, John Sessoms <[email protected]> wrote:
> I installed Photoshop CS5 last night, and this is the first image I've
> created with it.
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/jb_sessoms/4865885325/sizes/z/in/photostream/
>
> More on Photoshop at the end, but first, a little background -
>
> I got out of school last Friday with no assignments due, and nothing to
> photograph but what *I* wanted to photograph.
>
> Decided to make a weekend of it and see how far west I could get on US 64
> before I'd have to turn back on Saturday so I could make it back for my
> final class on Monday. I ended up making it as far as Memphis; went to
> Graceland and Sun Studios before heading back.
>
> I've been fascinated with US 64 for a number of years now. It was once the
> major thoroughfare through North Carolina and west through the middle of the
> nation. Along with US 1, Route 66 and US 70, US 64 was a major coast to
> coast artery prior to the development of the interstate highway system.
>
> Although it's mostly been widened to 4 lanes now, I want to document the
> experience traveling the old two-lane highway where I can. Along the way I
> passed a historic marker at a cemetery in Hendersonville, NC and backtracked
> to take some photos.
>
> Thomas Wolfe's father was a stone carver in Asheville, NC and apparently
> this stone angel, commissioned as a grave marker, was the inspiration for
> the title of Wolfe's seminal work.
>
> ... and now to Photoshop CS5.
>
> I didn't use content aware fill in creating this. I don't know how useful it
> will actually be because I mainly either want the background unchanged with
> all of its faults or I want it completely gone as I did here. I noticed that
> some of the "tools" I use most often operate freakishly in CS5.
>
> I use CTRL + and CTRL - a lot to zoom in and out of images so I can work on
> details. In CS3, these keyboard shortcuts worked linearly, each time you
> pressed the + or - while holding CTRL, the view zoomed proportionally.
>
> With CS5, the shortcuts operate anything BUT linearly. Once causes no
> response, twice causes a small response and the third time causes an
> extremely non-linear, disproportionate response - 1%, 2%, 3000%.
>
> The other "tool" I use all the time in Photoshop is holding down the
> space-bar to move around the image while zoomed in. Photoshop CS5 seems
> prone to extreme lag.
>
> You press down the space-bar and the tool takes a loooooooooooooong time
> before it changes to the hand.
>
> If you're in the groove and don't wait for it you end up using the wrong
> tool to do the wrong thing in the wrong place so that you have to go back
> and  correct a mistake before you can go back to trying to move to the
> correct place in the image.
>
> Then, once it does change, the default seems to be some kind of "finger
> flick" mode that causes the image to slide under the cursor. Once you start
> it moving it keeps moving when you let it go. It doesn't stop where you put
> it.
>
> Very difficult to position the cursor where you want it, although I believe
> I may have found the place in preferences to turn "finger flick" off.
>
> And, apparently, the extract filter is no more. Haven't used it in a long
> time, but it would have been useful in creating this particular image. No
> can do, so I spent hours figuring out how to do what I could have done in
> just a few seconds with the extract filter.
>
> Anyway, that's my impression from about 4 hours playing with Photoshop CS5.

Don't give a rat's ass about CS 5.  I use GIMP fer gawd's sake.

;-)

Nice pic, though.  Unlike Bob and Doug, I like the sign.  Don't know
why, I just do.

But since two of the best and most knowledgable photogs on the list
don't like it, who am I to say?

;-)

cheers,
frank


-- 
"Sharpness is a bourgeois concept."  -Henri Cartier-Bresson

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