Behind The Words









25 Fresh Matte Painting Tutorial


Matte Painting is another technique for Adobe Photoshop learner. These techniques include the lighting effects, illumination, composition rules and matte painting, manipulate photo footage.


A Matte Painting is a Art for filmmakers to create the illusion of environment and make distant location for build landscape location. In a digital environment, matte paintings can also be done in a 3-D environment, allowing for 3-D camera movements.


Here are 25 Fresh Matte Painting Tutorials in Photoshop. you will get good idea for Matte Painting as well.


Basic Destruction Techniques 
Basic Destruction Techniques will teach you how to created a flooded city and destroy buildings and structures. This tutorial will focus on the destruction of New York, which seems to be a favorite amongst filmmakers



In this tutorial You will learn demonstrate how to create a post-apocalyptic matte painting of an old cathedral.


Period matte paintings are those that need to recreate an environment from the past, whether it be Washington D.C. during the Civil War, or Rome in the Renaissance.


Lava City – Matte painting tutorial


Matte Painting Licht Tutorial


Matte Painting of Pandora


In this tutorial, Stas Lobachev will walk you through his creation of “Pandora Afterdark”, a digital matte painting that received a Golden Award and 2nd place in a pre-release competition hosted by CGTalk.ru


Making of football stadium


In order to practice and improve on certain aspects of painting I often do quick sketches with a specific theme or subject matter. The drawing “Pitch” was one of these ‘test-paintings’;


Renaissance – Matte Painting tutorial


Making of The Votussoloum Matte painting


Matte Painting Bob Ross Style


making of: Futuristic Snow City


Matte Painting tutorial – Making of Tajmahal


Platform Environment





Dale Chihuly


Born in 1941 in Tacoma, Washington, Dale Chihuly was introduced to glass while studying interior design at the University of Washington. After graduating in 1965, Chihuly enrolled in the first glass program in the country, at the University of Wisconsin. He continued his studies at the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), where he later established the glass program and taught for more than a decade.


In 1968, after receiving a Fulbright Fellowship, he went to work at the Venini glass factory in Venice. There he observed the team approach to blowing glass, which is critical to the way he works today. In 1971, Chihuly cofounded Pilchuck Glass School in Washington State. With this international glass center, Chihuly has led the avant-garde in the development of glass as a fine art.


His work is included in more than 200 hundred museum collections worldwide. He has been the recipient of many awards, including ten honorary doctorates and two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts.


Chihuly has created more than a dozen well-known series of works, among them Cylinders and Baskets in the 1970s; Seaforms, Macchia, Venetians, and Persians in the 1980s; Niijima Floats and Chandeliers in the 1990s; and Fiori in the 2000s. He is also celebrated for large architectural installations. In 1986, he was honored with a solo exhibition, Dale Chihuly objets de verre, at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Palais du Louvre, in Paris. In 1995, he began Chihuly Over Venice, for which he created sculptures at glass factories in Finland, Ireland, and Mexico, then installed them over the canals and piazzas of Venice.


In 1999, Chihuly mounted a challenging exhibition, Chihuly in the Light of Jerusalem; more than 1 million visitors attended the Tower of David Museum to view his installations. In 2001, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London curated the exhibition Chihuly at the V&A. Chihuly’s lifelong affinity for glasshouses has grown into a series of exhibitions within botanical settings. His Garden Cycle began in 2001 at the Garfield Park Conservatory in Chicago. Chihuly exhibited at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, near London, in 2005. Other major exhibition venues include the de Young Museum in San Francisco, in 2008, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, in 2011.


















Lonely Trees

Fabulous photographs of the artist Jessica Bader. This solitary trees seems almost poetic.
















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