samfred2 commited on
Commit
81631db
·
verified ·
1 Parent(s): 3ea7672

[flow_default] Transcription for audio/OIUHOIGDX/Create Beautiful Imagery with Midjourney A.I/9 - Photoshop and Midjourney Primer/94 - Creating a new document in Photoshop.wav

Browse files
94 - Creating a new document in Photoshop.json ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ {
2
+ "audio_file": "94%20-%20Creating%20a%20new%20document%20in%20Photoshop.wav",
3
+ "text": "I have Photoshop installed already, so I'll head over to Photoshop. And you're gonna be greeted by the welcome screens, typically gonna show you what's new or whatever they're pushing forward. And actually, I left this up because I wanted to show it really quick. I wanted to note that Adobe Photoshop does have a generative program itself built into Photoshop. And it's actually pretty powerful. So you can see even in the sample here, you can remove distractions. So color out certain parts of a photo to remove them you can do generated to fill so in this case They're going through an example where they're changing out part of the photo They're not actually entering a prompt when they're entering a prompt or you would enter a prompt but in the sample It's just like a little blob there and you can see here that's pulling up different options very similar to like what you'd experience in mid-journey Can expand photos very similarly you do in mid-journey You could generate similar images images once again, very similar to the very commands, like very subtle or very strong. You can even generate backgrounds. But the reason why I'm drawn to mid-journey versus Photoshop, and I've used Photoshop for I think almost, almost 20 years now, is that I don't think that currently Photoshop's generative AI is as strong or as compelling as mid-journeys. So I just wanted to note that really quick. We'll close this out. And what I want to do is as see what kind of document do you want to create. And here you can see some of the recent sizes in PPI's which is pixels per inch that I've used. And I know I've explained in previous videos that 72 PPI is the resolution of essentially computing. So whether it be on a mobile device or a desktop computer or tablet, 72 PPI is typically what you're seeing. Whereas with print it's 300 pixels per inch. And essentially the way to think about this is, you know, pixels per inch is just that. So the more pixels you put in there, the higher resolution you're gonna get, the sharper the image you're gonna see. Meaning that print resolution is actually better resolution than what we get on the web. So this is kind of an important thing to consider whenever you bring something to print. If you're working with a 72 PPI document and you go to print it, it might not look as crisp when you go to print. Which is typically whenever I try to bring something to the print, I bring it into 300 ppi. But that's an important note for later. I'm just going to go over to web. And we're just going to choose the most common web format, which is 1366 by 768 at 72 ppi. Now if you look over here on the right hand panel, we can make adjustments to the width and height. So we could change these around if we wanted to. We could also change it from pixels to inches, let's say, points, millimeters, et cetera. We can also change the resolution if we want here. We could change it to 300 ppi. Once again pixels per inch being an option or pixels per centimeter. And then there's some other important options here too. Things like RGB color versus CMYK is the other typical option. So we'll see this more in print. We have CMYK, lab, grayscale, and so on. But typically in working with web images, you're only going to use RGB. So what that means is that typically monitors work with red, green, and blue values. So any given color on your screen is a combination of a number of red, green, and blue. So it's 0 to 255 for each one. So for example, pure red is 255 red, zero green, and zero blue. We could deep dive all of this but also just not the focus of this course but just give me kind of a crash course into thinking about digital imaging. Quick note, print CMYK is actually cyan, magenta, yellow, and black. The K stands for black. And this is why you have to buy different ink cartridges for a printer. That's a whole other story. Let's go back to the web. And let's leave the rest as default here. We'll leave the background contents to be white, 8 bit. Let's go ahead and click create. All right, we've created a new document. In the next video, we'll start talking about some of the basic features of Photoshop. I'll see you there.",
4
+ "language": "en",
5
+ "duration": 248.83,
6
+ "timestamp": "2026-01-19T18:27:07.550206"
7
+ }