Name:
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Kelsey Taylor
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Student Number:
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17
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GIMP:
Chapter 2: Improving Digital Photos
PART
1: READ Chapter 2 in the GIMP book, then:
- Answer
all questions below, briefly but completely.
- Change
the color of the answer to BLUE.
- Copy this information and paste
in a new post in your DIGITAL GRAPHICS blog.
1.
What happens to an image when you
SCALE it? Does the canvas size change when you SCALE an image? It makes the smaller
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2.
Why should you scale images you take
on a digital camera before sending them in email or posting them on the web?
So they load faster
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3.
Why is it important to make sure the
width and height of an image you are going to scale are linked together? How
do you do this in GIMP? It would alter or distort
the image itself.
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4. What is the keyboard shortcut to UNDO? It undoes the last action done.
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5.
What does the SCALE TOOL do? It scales the current layer.
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6.
What is the difference between the
IMAGEàSCALE from the menu and the SCALE TOOL? It only works on the current layer.
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7.
Describe these JPG quality settings:
·
Optimize- Reduces
file size without losing quality
·
Progressive- It is helpful for pictures that are going to be uploaded online. Shows
the poor quality photo and gradually changes to high quality.
·
Save EXIF data- It is an option to add data about a photo.
·
Comment- A
place to add text to a photo.
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8.
Why would you decrease the quality
setting of a JPG image? Decreasing the quality of
the image would make it take up less space for memory.
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9.
Compare the size of a 95% quality setting
to a 100% setting of a JPG image: The 100% setting is three
times the size of the 95% setting.
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10.
If you save a JPG file at 100%, do
you preserve ALL the data in the image? What formats should you use if you
want to preserve all the data? No, you do not. A PNG or
TIFF would preserve all the data in the image.
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11.
Describe what it means when you
INDEX a file such as a GIF or PNG file. It means to use a fixed
number of colors. It helps make the size smaller.
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12.
What is RGB color mode? It uses different combinations of red, blue, and
green to create different colors.
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13.
What is dithering? It combines pixels of several colors. It creates
different effects.
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14.
What is grayscale mode? Desaturating an image.
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15.
What does interlacing a file do?
It makes images load in different ways.
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16.
What is cropping? Cropping a photo takes out whatever you don’t want in
it.
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Briefly describe these graphic file
types:
NOTE: It is important to learn
these types of files to be a proficient graphic artist, so pay attention when you describe these
file types.
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1.
JPEG- Highly
compressed and encoded in full color. It is efficient for photographs.
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2.
GIF- Effective
for images with only a few colors. Represents up to 256 colors.
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3.
PNG- Supports
transparency. Can be used for full color images; can be used with indexed
images.
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4.
XCF- Supports
layers and can only be read by GIMP.
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5.
TIFF- Is
not supported by the internet. Large files. Can handle 16 bits per color
channel.
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6.
Raw- Used
by camera manufacturers.
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7.
BMP- Microsoft’s
Windows Bitmap format. Large files, no advantages over PNG or TIFF.
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8.
PSD- Kodak’s
proprietary Photo CD format.
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9.
ICO- Microsoft
Windows Icon format. GIMP can read these.
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10.
PDF- GIMP
cannot edit these files. They are vector graphics formats, not pixel
graphics.
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PART 2: GIMP PROJECT:
Be sure to save these images in your
GIMP folder before inserting them in this document.
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2.
Look through the menus on the left
to see the supplemental information provided for you about the book.
3.
Click on the PHOTOS FROM THE BOOK
link, and scroll down to see the images for Chapter 2.
4.
Download and save these images: Red
Rock Canyon (the 4th image), Canyon lands (5th image),
American kestrel (the bird), Ethan (the little boy).
5. With the Red Rock Canyon
image, apply the following color techniques as indicated in the textbook on
pages 38-50 (try dragging the
sliders in each dialog box to see how they change the image, then UNDO to
restore the image back to the original), then DESCRIBE what each does:
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·
Brightness-Contrast: It lightens and brightens the photo. Uses two siders.
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·
Levels: Lightens and brightens the photo. Uses a slider.
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·
Curves: Lightens
and brightens the photo. Uses graphs and a mobile line.
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·
Threshold: Changes the photo to black and white. Slider adds
darkness.
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·
Desaturation: Takes away the color from the image, changing it to
grayscale.
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6.
When you have applied these
techniques to the Red Rock Canyon image,
apply THRESHOLD to the image, save it, then insert it here:
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7.
With the Canyon lands image, use Rotation to adjust the image as
indicated on pages 51-55. Save the rotated and insert here:
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8.
With the Kestral image, use the Sharpening techniques indicated on
pages 55-59. Save the sharpened image and insert here:
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9.
With the little boy, Ethan, image, correct the Red-Eye
as indicated on pages 61-66. Save the corrected image and insert here:
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