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Q3 Lesson 1

The document outlines a curriculum for Quarter 3, focusing on safety procedures, assessment methods, and storage of finished artwork. It also includes guidance on determining when a drawing is finished and provides a tutorial on saving files in Adobe Photoshop, detailing various file formats for web, print, and video production. Key topics include self-evaluation of artwork, comparison with reference photos, and understanding different file formats for effective image handling.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
21 views15 pages

Q3 Lesson 1

The document outlines a curriculum for Quarter 3, focusing on safety procedures, assessment methods, and storage of finished artwork. It also includes guidance on determining when a drawing is finished and provides a tutorial on saving files in Adobe Photoshop, detailing various file formats for web, print, and video production. Key topics include self-evaluation of artwork, comparison with reference photos, and understanding different file formats for effective image handling.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Quarter 3

Lesson 1 Perform Safety Procedures


in
Assessing Finish Work for Storage

Lesson 2 Determine the Criterial for


the Selection of Finished work to be
stored following the requirements

Lesson 3 Assessment Methods in


Maintaining Finished Work.
Quarter 3
Lesson 4 Concepts & Components of
Assessing Finished and Selected Work
in Illustration

Lesson 5 STORAGE AND HANDLING OF


MATERIALS IN DIFFERENT MEDIA

Lesson 6 Storing Finished Illustration


Artwork.
Quarter 3
Lesson 7 SAFETY PROCEDURES
WHEN STORING FINISHED WORK

Lesson 8 DIFFERENT TYPES OF


STORAGE DEVICE
LESSON 1:
Perform Safety
Procedures in
Assessing Finish
Work for Storage
LESSON 1:
Perform Safety
Procedures in
Assessing Finish
Work for Storage
HOW TO KNOW WHEN A DRAWING IS
FINISHED
BY CARRIE LEWIS
EVERY DRAWING IS DIFFERENT, SO
KNOWING WHEN EACH ONE IS FINISHED IS A
LITTLE MORE COMPLICATED THAN
WORKING THROUGH A SET OF BASIC STEPS
BECAUSE NO TWO DRAWINGS ARE ALIKE.
1. Know your goal for the drawing
- Look for anything that is interesting and capture it on paper in whatever
style and by whatever method you prefer.
2. Use a self-evaluation process
- Beyond meeting personal goals for the artwork, each piece needs to
pass your self-evaluation process. It needs to meet overall standards for
your art.
3. Does it look good in person and on the
computer?
There is no better way to see problems and potential problems in a drawing
than by looking at it in a different way. A digital image of a drawing reveals
the good parts of the drawing as well as the areas that need a little more
work.
4. Does it look like the reference photo?
Sometimes you need to compare digital versions of the
reference photo and drawing side by side, but not always. If
you have made a lot of changes to the drawing, that is
because you added your own personal style and touch with
the illustration.
5. You just do not know what else to do with it
There have been times when you might not think a drawing
was finished but did not know what else to do with it. There
was just a vague sense of dissatisfaction as though it was not
as good as it could be.
PHOTOSHOP TUTORIAL: SAVING FILES IN
PHOTOSHOP CS6
BY AMERICAN GRAPHICS INSTITUTE

Adobe photoshop allows you to save your files in a variety


of file formats, which makes it possible to use your images
in many ways. You can save images to allow for additional
editing of things such as layers and affects you have
applied in photoshop or save images for sharing with users
who need only the finished file for use on the web or for
printing.
PHOTOSHOP TUTORIAL: SAVING FILES IN
PHOTOSHOP CS6
UNDERSTANDING FILE
Three FORMATS
most common uses for
image files
-Web Production Formats
-Print Production Formats
-Video Production Formats
Web Production Formats
• JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group) This is a
common format for digital camera photographs and the primary
format for full-color images shared on the web.
• GIF (Graphic Interchange Format) GIF files are used to
display limited (indexed) color graphics on the Web. It is a
compressed format that reduces the file size of images, but it only
supports a limited number of colors and is thus more appropriate for
logos and artwork than photographs.
• PNG (Portable Network Graphics) PNG was developed as
an alternative to GIF for displaying images on the Web. It uses
lossless compression and supports transparency.
Print Production Formats
• PSD (Photoshop document) The Photoshop format (PSD)
is the default file format and the only format, besides the Large
Document Format, that supports most Photoshop features. Files
saved as PSD can be used in other Adobe applications, such as
Adobe Illustrator, Adobe InDesign, Adobe Premiere, and others.
- It is a format that can maintain the editing capabilities of the
drawing
• TIFF or TIF (Tagged Image File Format) TIFF is a
common bitmap image format. Most image-editing software and
page-layout applications support TIFF images up to 2GB in file
size. TIFF supports most color modes and can save images with
alpha channels
• EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) EPS files may contain
both vector and bitmap data. Because it is a common file format
used in print production, most graphics software programs
support the EPS format for importing or placing images. EPS is
a subset of the PostScript format.
• Photoshop PDF Photoshop PDF files are extremely
versatile, as they may contain bitmap and vector data. Images
saved in the Photoshop PDF format can maintain the editing
capabilities of most Photoshop features, such as vector objects,
text, and layers, and most color spaces are supported.
Video Production Formats
• TIFF or TIF Tagged-Image File Format (TIFF, TIF) is
used to exchange files between applications and computer
platforms. TIFF is a flexible bitmap image format supported
by virtually all paint, image-editing, and page-layout
applications.
• TARGA (Truevision Advanced Raster Graphics
Adapter) This legacy file format is used for video
production. The TARGA format supports millions of colors,
along with alpha channels.

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