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The following is an unedited press release, shown as received from the company represented. We've elected to present selected releases without editorial comment, as a way to provide our readers more information without further overtaxing our limited editorial resources. To avoid any possible confusion or conflict of interest, the Imaging Resource will always clearly distinguish between company-provided press releases and our own editorial views and content.

PRESS RELEASE: Deke McClelland is Singing in the Droplets


The Droplet Song -- The Next Hilarious Music Video Now on dekePod

SEBASTOPOL, Calif. -- Digital imaging master and unlikely crooner Deke McClelland tenders an original new love song to kick off the next round of his popular video podcast series, dekePod. Titled The Droplet Song (A Love Song to a Lost Feature in Photoshop), Deke's goofily romantic new tune honors one of Photoshop's most arcane but useful automation features.

Why devote a romantic ballad to Photoshop?

"I wanted to kick off the new round of dekePods with a kinder, gentler Deke. And what better way to do that than with a love song? A love song that just so happens to be about a Photoshop automation feature called droplets," explains Deke, author of over 80 books and a popular lecturer on Adobe Photoshop and the larger realm of computer graphics and design. Sponsored by O'Reilly Media and lynda.com, Deke's all new, sentimental yet laugh-out-load music video not only entertains, but also captures the intense enthusiasm essential to most (if not all) creative endeavors.

"The thing about droplets is that they're actually really useful, but there's virtually no documentation about them, which makes our music video one of the rare training pieces on the topic. And even though it's wrapped up in this over-the-top love song, the way you make a droplet, my recommended settings and how you use the finished product are all there," adds Deke, the creator of O'Reilly Media's bestselling One-on-One book and video series. "I wrote the melody and lyrics and my buddies at The Jellybricks put together the music. Someone showed me a few videos from 1960s folk singer Rod McKuen and everything fell into place."

Adds Deke: "In my One-on-One books for O'Reilly, I lay out all kinds of step-by-step techniques, many of which you'll find yourself using on a regular basis. And anything that you do regularly can be recorded as an action that you can then save as a droplet. Then you drag a collection of image files onto that droplet and just like that, you have batch processing. It takes some planning and some troubleshooting, but the results can be extremely satisfying. And amazingly, everything I just said is documented in lyric and verse in 'The Droplet Song.'"

You can start learning about droplets by watching The Droplet Song at digitalmedia.oreilly.com/2009/03/18/dekepod-droplet-song.html. This new dekePod music video is available for immediate download, sharing and also reposting on O'Reilly, iTunes, blip.tv, YouTube and deke.com.

For those excited by computer graphics and eager to learn, but weary of tediously dull training videos, dekePod delivers precisely the opposite. "In general, dekePod is an experiment in anti-training," notes Deke. "The videos are entertaining enough to work independently of their content. But every one of them packs a solid technique. The technique goes by quickly, but we take painstaking care to make sure every step is there. The surrounding stories provide context and the humor provides fun."


(First posted on Thursday, March 19, 2009 at 12:17 EDT)

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