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#1 |
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Administrator
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Photoshop can be used on Windows or Macintosh. It is not a free program, but you can download a free trial here. I made this tutorial with Photoshop CS3, but since I'm only using basic tools the same method should work for older and newer versions as well. This isn't the only way to make avatars with Photoshop, but this should be one of the faster and easier ways to make high quality avatars.
Screenshots to be added later. 1. Create a new document.
2. Open the image you would like to use for your avatar.
3. Use the move tool to drag your image onto the 115x145 document you first created.
4. Use the free transform tool to make your image fit within the canvas boundaries.
5. When the image is the correct size, commit the transform.
6. Save your image using the save for web tool.
7. All done. You can now upload your saved avatar to the forum. |
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#2 |
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Member [30%]
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For the image size, it's easier to go to
"image" then, "image size" From there it's easy to figure out. |
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#3 | |||
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Administrator
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That distorts the image proportions unless the image is already the same ratio (and most won't be). The result usually looks pretty bad. Most of the images will fall outside of the canvas boundaries. I prefer free transform because I can view how the final image size and cropping will look as I make the adjustments. |
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#4 |
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Member [30%]
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Yes, that is true, but if the image is already in portrait form it usually will turn out okay.
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#5 | |||
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Administrator
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Most of the photoshop jobs around here look worse than necessary, in my opinion. The proportional distortions and compression artifacts and other things I see from people using the wrong tools stand out to me. This tutorial is meant to show how to make avatars without sacrificing quality. |
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#6 |
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Member [10%]
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You can enter dimensions in the crop tool: select the crop tool, and in the bar at the top of the screen, under the menus, enter a width of 115 px, a Height of 145 px, and a resolution of 72 dpi.
When you pull the crop tool it will retain the correct proportions. Once that is done you can save for web. A few things of note: 72 dots per inch is screen resolution, anything higher is for printing purposes. If you don't see the fields I am referring to, make sure the crop tool is selected, and that options is checked in the window menu. |
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#7 |
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Core Member [111%]
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I use crop tool with specified dimensions (115x145), allows me to see what it will look like, it just isn't small yet, only cropped to ratio. On final crop it resizes. I do very little Smart Sharpen (100%/0.1/lens blur) to bring out tiny details. Save for web and done.
Will try the transform as well. hmm interesting using the transform, one can see the result in it's final size giving a better idea of what it will look like. |
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