Archive for the 'Digital photography' Category

Jul 24 2009

Yotophoto royalty free photos

Again from Wes Fryer’s podcast, Yotophoto - royalty free, Creative commons protected images – ideal for  anyone using web images -  a simple one stop search for usable images

Who’s using Yotophoto?

Designers, Bloggers, Educators, and Digital Artists from all over the world are adding imagery to their projects for free.

About the images

We index images in the public domain or available for free usage under various forms of copyleft licensing.

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Jul 24 2009

Create any size wall posters from any size images

Have you ever wanted to make a really big poster sized picture?  Well now you can do this online and free at Blockposters
Upload an image from your computer and choose how many sheets wide you would like your poster to be printed

via Lifehacker

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Jul 24 2009

Photowipe – remove unwanted objects from photos

Published by Mike Temple under Digital photography

PhotoWipe is a revolutionary image processing tool that magically removes unwanted objects from your photos.


Just paint over them in black, and click go! Uncovers hidden details in your photos. Sit back and watch as cage bars disappear from the zoo, and your old girlfriend or boyfriend fades away.

It removes wrinkles, or it can remove entire facial features. PhotoWipe uses a modified version of the greycstoration image processing library do its work. You can see more samples of this incredible tool here.

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Jul 24 2009

Give your photographs a mosaic effect – digital photography

Published by Mike Temple under Digital photography

Design site Nifty Tutorials has posted a practical step by step on how to create a mosaic effect for your photographs using Photoshop.

From start to finish, this shouldn’t take you more than (tops) 10 minutes, and it really makes a cool looking transformation

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mosaic.png

Personally, I think this would be a great way to combine a few of your favorite vacation photos into one awesome montage; you could really use this with any combination of photos.

many thanks to Lifehacker

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