Experiences

Half-Day PhotoShop Training With Andy Craig – Northumberland Coast

Half-Day PhotoShop Training With Andy Craig – Northumberland Coast

Duration: 3 hours

Duration: 3 hours | Cost: £65 (open booking), £95 (one-to-one); £120 (one-to-two); £180 for a group booking of up to 6

09:00 to 12:00 (typically)

Description

Andy has a very natural approach to Photoshop processing; a modern take on established darkroom techniques. You’ll learn how to use everyday tools that are essential to anyone serious about digital photography, fixers that allow you to correct minor problems with an image and artistic effects that allow you to give your photographs the WOW factor without losing the atmosphere of the original photograph.

Cost Includes

Comprehensive course notes, coffee/tea.

Essential Information

This Experience is sold as a Gift Voucher, enabling the voucher recipient to schedule a mutually convenient location, date & time with Andy.

£65 is the cost for tuition as part of a maximum group of 4. Once we have agreed a date, that date will be posted on my website and others may join us for a sociable but manageable group.

If you would prefer a guaranteed one-to-one session, this is available for £95 (£120 for two people booking together, £180 for a group of 4 booking together)

Although the teaching is done using Andy’s carefully chosen sample images, you are welcome to bring your own images to the session and Andy will help you work on getting the best from them.

About Andy Craig

Andy is a one of the North-East’s most highly regarded Wedding and Portrait photographers having moved his successful business to the area from Edinburgh in 2008.

A photo-journalist at heart, Andy applies his art to the landscapes and seascapes of Northumberland and has been recording his “Photographic Diary of a Dog-Walker on the Northumberland Coast” since 2008. (find it at www.Northumberland360.com).

Andy aims to introduce his students to the “art of natural photography” which includes elements of photo-journalism but, having 30 years of photography behind him, he is well versed in the time honoured techniques of classical landscape photography too.

As part of natural photography Andy is an advocate for “invisible Photoshop”; the end result should be a photograph not a digital manipulation. Andy limits his post-production techniques to those that mimic the traditional darkroom.