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Photoshop Settings for Digital Rendering

Lesson 3 from: Digital Rendering for Designers

Jorge Paricio

Photoshop Settings for Digital Rendering

Lesson 3 from: Digital Rendering for Designers

Jorge Paricio

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Lesson Info

3. Photoshop Settings for Digital Rendering

Lesson Info

Photoshop Settings for Digital Rendering

all right. In this second part, we're going to be working on a kitchen blender, and, uh, when you start, I just wanted to start with a blank page. This is for a shop. Um, how do we start? Sometimes we may just get confused on how we get going. If this is the first time we used for a shop, um, I also have to mention that creative life has also, or the classes in photo shop. Just check the catalogue to see which ones would fit you if you need to get more training on just the basics and photo shop, or you can follow along over here just for digital rendering for designers. So we have a blank page over here, but let's start from zero. We would go all the way under top on file. No. And then you would just obviously have to give it a name by default is highlighted in blue test one. You would have to figure out how many pixels or inches you would want in your page. If you want 8.5, then you can just type your dimensions here. The resolution. This is very important. In photo shop we have. This...

is a rester vase program. Mainly that means that you depend on your pixels. Did you cannot scale up if you dio? If you choose, let's say a resolution of 20 which would be absolutely bad. It would be such a little resolution. You do your you finish your rendering. That's a very low, tiny tiny drawing. If you wanted to make a poster out of it, you would be making a posted out of huge pixels because you cannot really scale up your drawing. So what I'm trying to say here, you always have to work with the highest resolution working backwards. You can always work large, and then you can do like a small print if you want. But in case your client wants you to make a large poster, you would have the opportunity of doing that because initially you work with a higher resolution. All right, so let's work with something that I think would be the minimum 300 dp I head and half by 11. That works good. As far as the color mode here. You would have to stop for a second and think, Well, if it is going to be a digital rendering. You never have the option. If you never really think that you will be printing it, then you would go to RGB color. If you think you're gonna be working digitally but then printed have handouts or have high resolution printouts, then you would have to choose C M. Y que right. So one way or another, you pick your to pick. Your choice is there and then by default, you would have to use your background contents whether it would be white. You can choose a background color or make it transparent if you make it transparent. You get this funny looking cover page here, which is this checker pattern. If that bothers you, you can always go here on the bottom and choose your color. So I'm going to start using my pen right now. You can switch between these two, you pick your white click. OK, this is your white, and then you dumped a white color. He takes you a bit longer, but you also have your options that way

Class Materials

Bonus Materials with Purchase

DR-2A Sample Coffee Maker.psd
DR-2A-2 Sample Backpack.psd
DR-3B-1 Car Half Done.psd
DR-3C-3 Car Half Done.psd
DR-4A Living Room Example 1.psd
DR-4A Living Room Example 2.psd
Digital Rendering Packet.pdf
Tool Presets.tpl

Ratings and Reviews

Gigi
 

This is actually the course I was looking for. This is DIGITAL rendering, which in an odd way makes you appreciate hand drawn rendering. Great! Thanks!

Heather
 

awesome!

sikander sylvester
 

Student Work

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