By the time I had everything in place and right where I wanted it, the coffee was cold. In this scene, I had a mug with coffee in it. In order to create the ambiance of a bakery or grocery store, I built a small set in my studio using a handful of items from my prop room. One shot in particular involved a donut box. More specifically, I was photographing food boxes for a food box manufacturer. The DilemmaĪ few years ago I was photographing a series hero shots for a client’s product line. Through this process, I developed a really cool and practical technique using the flame filter. While in the in Filter > Render menu, you may have also noticed another odd filter called "Flame…” Seems a bit odd at first glance right? Well a few years ago I ran into a little issue with a product image that I was working on for a client. I’ve used some of these trees as background elements in some of my work and if you know what you’re doing, you can get them to look pretty realistic. Believe it or not, this filter has came in quite handy while working on some past composite work. That’s right, a tree filter! If you haven’t seen it, go check it out: Filter > Render > Tree. Over the years Adobe has added some pretty crazy filters that at first glance seem to have no practical use. Do Those Random Photoshop Filters Have a Practical Use?
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