Yesterday I found an interactive
DVD CS2 training series that sells for $99, so how about going to the other end of the gammut with some free online
training videos? Lombergar.com, which I admittedly have never heard of before, offers over twenty free online video tutorials (QuickTime required)
covering a wide range of topics from creating a "believable rain" effect, photomerging and matching color,
text on a path, lense blur, creating sketch effects and more. They look like interesting tutorials, some of which I
haven't seen covered in video form anywhere else.Free video tutorials from Lombergar.com
Yesterday I found an interactive
DVD CS2 training series that sells for $99, so how about going to the other end of the gammut with some free online
training videos? Lombergar.com, which I admittedly have never heard of before, offers over twenty free online video tutorials (QuickTime required)
covering a wide range of topics from creating a "believable rain" effect, photomerging and matching color,
text on a path, lense blur, creating sketch effects and more. They look like interesting tutorials, some of which I
haven't seen covered in video form anywhere else.Reader Comments
(Page 1)2. Those tutorials stink. You wouldn't be on this site if you think those are helpful.
Posted at 11:15PM on Feb 12th 2006 by Zach








1. I think Adobe is doing the right thing. They seldom issue updates for releases prefering to do extensive Beta testing of the next release. An OSX/Intel release of the current software would just be a hack job. Waiting for the next release will insure a quality product reducing support issues enormously and increasing overall customer satisfaction. Too bad it will take so long but they did not plan the release of Apple's computers.
Posted at 1:47PM on Feb 3rd 2006 by Ira Victor Ellenbogen