(Originally published on Blogcritics.org)
My favorite Photoshop instructor of all time, Bert Monroy, took people on a search for impossible worlds at AdobeMAX, at the Los Angeles Convention Center, October 5-7. AdobeMAX brings together users of Adobe software, such as Photoshop, InDesign, Premiere Pro, and Acrobat, with engineers, developers and other people from Adobe’s creative and corporate teams.
Monroy, who started out using traditional illustration tools, has had a long career as an artist and designer. He first encountered computers in 1984 and used the first version of Photoshop (called “Display” and later Photoshop 0.45). Soon afterwards, he wrote the first book on Photoshop.
You may have seen Monroy on Tech TV where he was a regular for three years. Until 2010 he hosted Pixel Perfect with Bert Monroy, a weekly Photoshop podcast for Revision3.com. He currently teaches on Lynda.com.
It is fascinating and amusing to watch Monroy work. Not only does he have a great dry sense of humor, but the reactions he evokes from his audiences are entertaining. Even people who have used Photoshop for years can be seen literally gasping and muttering “OMG” at the tricks Monroy shows them.
That was the case when he demonstrated the flame and tree features in Photoshop, which allow you to use the program’s brushes to add trees and fire, extremely difficult and time-consuming any other way.
During the “Creating Impossible Worlds” class, Monroy showed students how to create two illustrations: Haunted House and The Magic Orb.
For Haunted House, he started with a daytime photo of a non-scary house in his neighborhood. He used Photoshop to remove distracting elements such as wires and to “damage” the house by removing roof tiles and breaking banisters. A moon to shine over the house came from a NASA photo. A ghost to appear in a window was shot with an inexpensive camera. Finally, he used the Render Tree feature (found under the menu: FILTER | RENDER) to surround the house with spooky trees.
For The Magic Orb illustration, he again started with a series of unrelated items: a video of a beach, a photo of a rock formation from the U.S. Southwest, a vacation picture of clouds in Europe, some pictures of boats, and the head of a gargoyle from a building in Europe. He combined these and then used a custom brush, made from a picture of a bat taken off the web, to create a cloud of bats surrounding the orb. Finally, he showed how he could take a photo of his own hands with an iPhone, “ogre-fy” them, and incorporate them into The Magic Orb work.
Monroy encouraged the students: “If you can imagine it, you can create it.” He is one of the few instructors I have ever seen to have his classes interrupted by applause. Still, he discounts his technical skill. “I’m primarily a painter,” he said during the class. “Adobe Illustrator is my pencil and Photoshop is my paint.”
Some pencil. Some paint. You can find out more about Bert Monroy and his classes at his website. A Pixel Perfect episode from 2008 is shown below.