Thank you very much for this video! I was struggling with the Shift+I shortcut because it always activated the eyedropper tool. I've never changed my shortcut settings, but it turned out that for some reason on my MacBook Pro, the correct shortcut is Shift+Command+I :)
Thank you so much! Your tutorials are very useful and helpful for me. And very easy to understand as well. Pls do more Ps tricks for product photography.
Hey man. Your stuff is super helpful. I’m just getting product photography and am a complete newbie with photoshop but your videos have inspired and helped me a great deal
I must confess, your videos are super educative and straight to the point. My question is would you go through the stress of arranging different backgrounds when you can shoot on a white paper and do the manipulation you did in this video: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-YOWDaxVGO9I.htmlsi=VqcNAC4bX4crnItJ
I do NOT agree! It is interesting as a technique but for me, as a consumer, the original image was more appealing while the second one is flat and artificial. I will not be attracted by a product presented in this way. I want to know that what I see is real. The first image represent few sheets of colored paper. Easy to identify. The second image represent what? One colored paper sheet? Or what? It is too artificial to make me buy the product.
All he did was clean up the line, it's still the same sheets of coloured paper as you referred to . So what exactly is it that you have an issue with ? If you saw the final image on a poster, you wouldn't be aware of the work that went into it post production tbh :)
@@lifewithlade6844 you not understand. When you take out small shadows , all images lose volume and shape. Look at food photograpjy. If you take pictures on a textured, wood table versus a sheet of vinil. Is a big difence in eye perception. When you take pictures on flat, not consistent paper, all you have are those small imperfect lines.