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  2. You Suck at Photoshop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You_Suck_at_Photoshop

    Episodes typically star fictional Photoshop user Donnie Hoyle, who demonstrates tools and techniques in Photoshop, usually on a Macintosh computer.Donnie is a person with severe and chronic personal problems relating to his job, his relationships and disintegrating marriage; various legal problems, career and emotional problems; which tend to weave themselves into the narrative to dark comedic ...

  3. Masking (art) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masking_(art)

    In art, craft, and engineering, masking is the use of materials to protect areas from change, or to focus change on other areas. This can describe either the techniques and materials used to control the development of a work of art by protecting a desired area from change; or a phenomenon that (either intentionally or unintentionally) causes a ...

  4. Talk:Masking (art) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Masking_(art)

    Masking Choices Masks are used to prevent finish deposition on product surfaces during wet paint, powder coat and e-coat processes. They can be as simple and "low-tech" as a single strip of masking tape applied to a flat surface before wet paint is applied, or as high-tech as a custom-molded Ultrabake mask that protects a complex, three-dimensional surface from a nine-stage coating process.

  5. Unsharp masking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unsharp_masking

    Unsharp masking applied to lower part of image. Unsharp masking (USM) is an image sharpening technique, first implemented in darkroom photography, but now commonly used in digital image processing software. Its name derives from the fact that the technique uses a blurred, or "unsharp", negative image to create a mask of the original image. The ...

  6. Blend modes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blend_modes

    The Photoshop and illusions.hu flavors also produce the same result when the top layer is pure white (the differences between these two are in how one interpolates between these 3 results). These three results coincide with gamma correction of the bottom layer with γ=2 (for top black), unchanged bottom layer (or, what is the same, γ=1; for ...

  7. Matte (filmmaking) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matte_(filmmaking)

    One would mask everything above the store's roof, and the other would mask everything below it. By using these masks/mattes when copying these images onto the third, the images can be combined without creating ghostly double-exposures. In film, this is an example of a static matte, where the shape of the mask does not change from frame to frame ...

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  9. Visual masking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_masking

    In dichoptic visual masking, the target is presented to one eye and the mask to the other, whereas in monoptic visual masking, both eyes are presented with the target and the mask. It was found that the masking effect was just as strong in dichoptic as it was in monoptic masking, and that it showed the same timing characteristics. [6] [7] [8]