Dodge and Shoot / Joseph Dunphy
Say Goodbye
This photo was the beginning of an educational experience for me as I learned one of the drawbacks to photoshopping an image: the results are sometimes not browser safe. I am extremely dissatisfied with this initial result, but let's not forget what the purpose of the photoshopping was - to undo the ill effects of a bad photo developing, done at Osco. I can't afford my own darkroom, so sometimes I am stuck, and have to make do.
This picture was intended for posting on a photoessay about my hike around town. I had hoped to make this look as much like an undamaged photo as possible, and as viewed on my own screen, seemed to have some success. Then I viewed it on somebody else's computer, and was most unhappily surprised.
Returning you to where you were ...
1. The unphotoshopped version of this image and discussion of the illegal demolition.
Note: In the near future, after I've had time to play a little more, this page will link to better, more stable versions of this image, or at least what I hope will be, made possible by an abandonment of the unrealistic hope of making this image look real. I'm just going to turn it into a series of prints, and be done with it.
Say Goodbye
This photo was the beginning of an educational experience for me as I learned one of the drawbacks to photoshopping an image: the results are sometimes not browser safe. I am extremely dissatisfied with this initial result, but let's not forget what the purpose of the photoshopping was - to undo the ill effects of a bad photo developing, done at Osco. I can't afford my own darkroom, so sometimes I am stuck, and have to make do.
This picture was intended for posting on a photoessay about my hike around town. I had hoped to make this look as much like an undamaged photo as possible, and as viewed on my own screen, seemed to have some success. Then I viewed it on somebody else's computer, and was most unhappily surprised.
Returning you to where you were ...
1. The unphotoshopped version of this image and discussion of the illegal demolition.
Note: In the near future, after I've had time to play a little more, this page will link to better, more stable versions of this image, or at least what I hope will be, made possible by an abandonment of the unrealistic hope of making this image look real. I'm just going to turn it into a series of prints, and be done with it.