Piano / Guitar Cross-Reference Diagram

Feb 01
2010

So I made this diagram to help me notate progressions I write on guitar into my sequencer. I haven’t seen one that shows the octave relationship before, so I made one. Any way, I eventually hope to have the fretboard memorized, and relative pitch dialed in and all that. In the meantime, a cheat sheet will suffice.

Download it HERE (right-click, save-as)

NKS3 – Natural Media Tool Palette for Photoshop CS4

Jan 28
2010

NKS3 - Natural Media Toolkit for Photoshop CS4

And.. NKS hits version 3 *Fan Fare!!!*
Not so much I know. But, honestly, this is a pretty exciting release for me. The goal with NKS has always been to get some of that sketch book feel in Photoshop, and this version steps it up in some really useful ways. Typically if you want to have a decent archive of your sketches, you’re either working digitally, using tools that feel, well, digital-or you’re spending a ton of time at the scanner. Sketch, sketch, sketch… scan, scan, scan. It’s not a horrible workflow, but there’s always room for improvement. While I’ll probably never give up sketching on real paper, a tool like this is a huge boon. I can get pretty close to the sketch book feel-and when I’m done, I’ve got a digital asset ready to file. One of the new features is a sketch book canvas. Not rocket science by any means, but it gets this experience a bit closer to the real deal. Tape a piece of paper to your WACOM tablet to get rid of that plastic-on-plastic feel and the tactile response is nearly right. In addition to the new canvas, I’ve added a complimentary color bar. Different from the traditional spectrum picker in that each colors’ compliment is available directly across the X axis. I’ve found this layout really fosters the consideration of other relationships as well. One-click for the canvas, one click for the color bar. Pretty straight forward. Pretty fast.

The tools themselves have undergone major revisions. With full rebuilds of the Ball Point, Ink Pen, Markers, Spray Paint, and the addition of new Stippling tools. The kit goes well beyond sketching in use and is viable for many rendering and texturing tasks. Oh yeah, and it’s free.

In addition to the new NKS panel, I suggest everyone check out Anastasiy’s custom color picker panel for Photoshop. Check out his site here.

Installation instructions included in the zip.
NKS3 is compatible with Adobe Photoshop CS4, on Mac OS or Windows machines.

>Download NKS3

(ZIP 11.6 MB) (Right-click + Save-As)

Creative Commons License
NKS3 by NKURENCE is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

Jake Mandell 3 Albums + 3 Eps Free

Jul 26
2009

Parallel Processes

There’s a good chance this could be a case of new to me, old to you as often happens with web content, especially with things that are years old. But this was so cool I couldn’t resist…

Jake Mandell, proprietor of Love Songs For Machines (an IDM legacy in it’s own right) has made 3 full length albums and 3 eps available for free on his site, including Parallel Processes and Quondam Current. If you’ve never heard of him, which I suppose is vaguely possible, check it out, it’s free–how can you go wrong with free??? If you like it, make sure you pick up Love Songs For Machines (just writing this is making me feel all kinds of nostalgic).

Some really interesting info in his bio too–definitely a guy who’s passionate about his work, and it really shows. Would love to hear him releasing again. I think he and James Horner could have done an insane collab on the new Tron score :-\

NKS2 – Natural Media Tool Palette for Photoshop CS4

Jun 14
2009

header2

Natural Media Tool Palette for Photoshop CS4

nks2

I’ve spent a considerable amount of time over the last week rebuilding some of the tools from the first NKS panel and refining the overall tool selection to be more efficient and more dynamic. I wont be having much time available to retrofit this kit anytime soon, so wanted to make sure this version was well thought out and worthy of the effort.

The tools are somewhat personalized around my workflow in the sense that I use pencils, markers, ball pens and ink quite frequently. However the selection remains wide enough that I feel many concept artists, graphic designers and product designers could utilize them effectively- in any capacity from ideation to rendering. I’ve attempted to keep the tools true to their name and real life functionality, so lead should look and act like lead, and so on. If you experience any shortcomings in their effect it’s due either to a fault of my observation or the extent to which brushes can currently be modulated in Photoshop, which is probably somewhat true of all of the tools to some degree.

I’ve made a short screencast showing the install procedure and a quick overview of the tools in action to give you a sense of their effect without committing to a download.

View NKS2 Screencast

 

Please note that about 50 seconds into the video (where I first start using the tools) that they’re only putting down dots. This is due to a setting at the bottom of the Tool Preset window [Current Tools Only] being checked – this needs to be unchecked for the palette to function properly. Aside from just putting down dots, you could get an error message like ‘Cannot execute the ‘Select’ command’, or other nonsense. So make sure you ‘uncheck’ that if you haven’t already.

One of the cool features of this kit, aside from centralization, is the fact that you can reset the initial state of any of these tools to better suit your personal taste. Say for instance that you like a darker lead, or would like the grease pencil to start out with a circular tip and a lighter tone. All you need to do is create a new tool preset (with your settings) and rename it identically to the existing tool preset (i.e. ‘Grease’, etc) which can all be done in Photoshops ‘Tool Preset’ palette.

Another nice feature about having tool presets triggered by actions is that you can assign hotkeys to them in the Actions Palette. For example if you primarily use markers and pencils you could set the Dull Lead to F1, Sharp Lead to Shift-F1, Lt Marker to F2.. and so on, you get the idea. I hope eventually that Photoshop will support hotkey addressing of custom actions with regular keys (non-function). I think Autodesk Maya is terrific example for Adobe to emulate in this regard.

This custom tool panel, like the first version, is only compatible with Adobe Photoshop CS4 and newer. It was created with the Adobe Configurator utility, and should be used with the most current version of Adobe Extension Manager (2.1 or newer). So make sure you get that installed before giving it a go. You can grab the newest version here.

Enjoy!

p.s. if anyone feels they’re able to improve the natural effect or feel of any one of these tools – please send me the updated preset and I’ll evaluate it for inclusion in the next version. I’m more than happy to give credit (and a high-five) to anyone who does so – however I cannot offer any monetary compensation as this is a freeware effort.

>Download NKS2

(right-click and save)

Creative Commons License
NKS2 by NKURENCE is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.