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April 2010 wallpaper

March 30th, 2010

Well my Asia trip is over and I´m now starting to work through the mountain of images I took feeling I could have shot more, woken up earlier and stayed out later but the truth is I´m happy with the way things have gone.

This month I´m feeling generous so I´ve got 2 desktop wallpapers for you to choose from. The first is a pretty standard simple composition for a wallpaper and shows a small plant growing on the sandy banks of the river Ganges.

To make the above image your wallpaper

Click the link below that matches your screen resolution then right click the image and click ‘Set as desktop background’ or ‘Use Image as Desktop Picture” on the Mac. If you want different sizes just let me know.

1024×768 | 1280×800| 1280×853 | 1440×900 | 2560×1600

The second photo was shot in a steel works and for me is a much stronger image although not something I´d normally choose as a wallpaper.

To make this image your wallpaper, follow the same steps as above but use these links

1024×768 | 1280×800| 1280×853 | 1440×900 | 2560×1600

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How to create monthly wallpapers

February 3rd, 2010

My monthly wallpapers are becoming more and more popular and people are starting to ask me ‘How you do dat Tom..?’ so I thought it might help a few folk out if I shared the process which I go through to make these things.

Well it’s all created in photoshop and uses just 2 files. The first is the photograph, but not every image works well as a desktop wallpaper, I often find myself shooting specifically for the wallpaper. When I do Im looking for a particular composition, I’m looking for clean, uncluttered, simple, bold images that have space not only for the calendar details but also for the desktop shortcuts (of which I have way too many). You’ll need to crop and resize it to fit your screen resolution.

The other file you’ll need will be a .psd file that will contain the actual calendar info (month name, days of the week etc.)

in this file you’ll need several layers:

- One with text for the month and year name (ie ‘Feb 2010′).
- One with text for each of the days of the week (Mon – Sun).
- One with text for each of the numbers between 1 and 31.
- A shape layer which I use as the calendar background and have set the opacity to about 60%. You may wish to add some other effects, such as a shadow or bevel & emboss.
- One with text for a copyright notice layer.
- A Transparant background layer.

If I’ve done my maths right thats a total of 42 layers. Arrange the layers nicely and it should look something like this.

screenshot 1 of calendar wallpaper

Confussed??, Lost?? or lazy?? :) just download mine from here. Feel free to change it as much as you wish.

Now every month you’ll have to rearange the numbers so they match the days for that month. ie. when the 1st
of the month is on a Monday, Tuesday, Wed…etc. But you’ll only need to do this 7 times, one for each day of the week. Save each file as a seperate .psd, and eventually you should end up with files that are named something like this Calendar_Week_Begin_Mon.psd, Calendar_Week_Begin_Tues.psd, Calendar_Week_Begin_Wed.psd …etc.

Now when you create your monthly wallpaper all you have to do is check whcih day of the week the 1st is and open the correct file (you many also need to hide the number 31 for some months and the numbers 29, 30 and 31 for February)
.

If you’re still with me you should have 2 files open in Photoshop.

In the Calendar_Week_Begin_xxx.psd file change the month name and year to match the current month.

Now it should be a simple case of dragging and dropping all the layers from the Calendar_Week_Begin_xxx.psd file into your photo file, I keep them all grouped together to make this easier. Flatten it and save this as a .jpg. Browse you hard disk until you find where you saved it (you did save it somewhere sensible, no??) right click and select ‘Set As Desktop Background’

As if by magic, you’ve just created your desktop wallpaper.

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February 2010 Wallpaper

January 29th, 2010

Another month has passed & its time for the monthly wallpaper. Stay tuned as I’m currently working on a how to guide to help you create your own wallpapers, until then you can use this one.

thumbnail

So how do I put this image on my desktop ??:

Click the link below that matches your screen resolution then right click the image and click ‘Set as desktop background’ or ‘Use Image as Desktop Picture” on the Mac. If you want different sizes just let me know.

1024×768 | 1280×800| 1280×853 | 1440×900 | 2560×1600

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October ’09 Wallpaper

September 28th, 2009

This months wallpaper comes all the way from Burma and show a young boy fishing in the Irrawaddy river. This shot was taken about 18 months ago, for next months wallpaper I promise to have something a bit more recent.

800x600

Instructions for use:

Click the link below that matches your screen resolution then right click the image and click ‘Set as desktop background’ or ‘Use Image as Desktop Picture” on the Mac. Ive added a new size to match the screen size of 1280×800, as I recieved a special request, if you’d like a different size that I’ve not included, just ask.

800×600 |1024×768 | 1280×800 | 1280×853 |1440×900 | 2560×1600

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Playing with water & July wallpaper

June 30th, 2009

I’ve actually had this as my desktop wallpaper for the last few weeks, I guess its one of the privileges of my job, I get to try out the wallpapers first!

I’ve seen shots like this many times its nothing new but it certainly is fascinating to see the different shapes made every time a drop of water hits a puddle and it really was fun shooting it too.

If your wandering how I shot it I’ll give you a brief explanation now.

Firstly I set up a large bowl of water (in my case it was actually a frying pan, but any similar sized container will do). Next I filled a plastic carrier bag with water and tied it about 2 foot directly above my bowl. I made a tiny whole in the bag to get the drips flowing, I then, with my camera on a tripod, I manually focused on the exact spot where the drips were landing and set my shutter speed to 1/250 sec which gave me an aperture of f/8. I then fired of over a hundred shots with my flash bouncing off a nearby wall.

Its a very hit and miss activity trying to judge the exact split second that the water will make the exact shape you require is near impossible with out some really high tech gear (but where’s the fun in that). A slight tweak in Adobe Lightroom with the colour temperature and contrast and this is what I ended up with.

As always just click the link below that matches your screen resolution then right click the image and click ‘Set as desktop background’ or what ever the mac equivalent is (I really really really must find out, if anyknows please let me know as I dont have acces to a Mac :( ).

800×600 | 1024×768 | 1280×853 | 1440×900 | 2560×1600

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