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Apple recently selected the Best App of 2017. It's Aurora HDR! How awesome is that? You can grab it at store.stuckincustoms.com/collections/software
Man, that team at Apple has some great taste in software, eh? Very nice of them even though I was pretty down on Apple at the beginning of this year because the first round of the new Macbooks were kinda not-so-great in my opinion. The new Macbook Pros are much improved for sure. Anyway, no matter what kind of Mac you have, you'll love the software (oh and it's Windows now too!)
Apps: Hipstamatic (Blackyes SF + Jack London)
Backstory: I went to a restaurant and I fell in love with the light of the bathroom
All elements shot with an iPhone6 using ProCamera app.
Edited on iPad with TouchRetouch and Mextures apps.
To learn more about creative photography processes and art on an iPhone you might be interested in my book co-written with Bob Weil:
www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1937538184/spea06-20#cust...
and website: www.iphoneographycentral.com
or to learn more about editing on mobile devices, please sign up to our occasional newsletter:
Created on my iPad using a combination of the apps listed below:
Snapseed for colour saturation, sharpness and levels
TouchRetouch for Clone stamp editing
Tangled FX for outline work
Procreate for Brush Strokes and Layer control
Stackables for Texture creation and layering
Excerpt from www.pc.gc.ca/apps/DFHD/page_nhs_eng.aspx?id=524:
Existing plaque: Battle of Beaverdams Park, Thorold, Ontario
Following their repulse at Stoney Creek the Americans sent a force from Fort George to destroy a British advanced post at Beaver Dams. Warned of their approach by an Indian scout and by Laura Secord, a force of Iroquois from Caughnawaga and the Grand River, led by Captains Dominique Ducharme and William Kerr, ambushed the attackers near here on 24 June 1813, and compelled them to surrender to Lieutenant James Fitzgibbon of the regular British army. After this defeat the Americans did not again venture out in force, leaving the British in control of the area. *Note: This designation has been identified for review. A review can be triggered for one of the following reasons - outdated language or terminology, absence of a significant layer of history, factual errors, controversial beliefs and behaviour, or significant new knowledge.
Description of Historic Place
The Battle of Beaver Dams National Historic Site of Canada is a large open industrial landscape including part of the Welland Canal on the east side of the City of Thorold, Ontario. Located south of the Niagara escarpment, it was the site of a decisive British victory during the War of 1812, between Iroquois and American forces. The site encompasses a variety of properties including urban residential property in Thorold, parts of the Welland Canal, a cemetery, and industrial land. Official recognition refers to the site on its legal lots.
Heritage Value
The Battle of Beaver Dams was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1921. It is designated because: warned by Laura Secord and an Iroquois scout, a force of Iroquois from Caughnawaga and the Grand River defeated an attacking American force near Beaver Dams on 24 June 1813; the American defeat left the British in control of the Niagara area for the remainder of 1813.
The Battle of Beaver Dams, which occurred on June 24 1813, was a crucial battle during the War of 1812. Following their defeat at Stoney Creek, the Americans sent a force under Lieutenant-Colonel Charles G. Boerstler from Fort George to destroy a British advanced post at Beaver Dams. A force of about 600 infantry and cavalry left Fort George for American-controlled Queenston so as not to reveal the true destination of their mission. At Queenston, Laura Secord, the wife of a wounded Loyalist, overheard the American plans and journeyed, with an Iroquois scout, to warn the British of the pending attack. Forewarned, a combined force of Iroquois from Caughnawaga and the Grand River, led by Captains Dominique Ducharme and William Kerr, ambushed the American force and compelled them to surrender to British Lieutenant James Fitzgibbon of the regular British Army. After their defeat, the Americans left the British in control of the Niagara area for the remainder of 1813.
Character-Defining Elements
The key elements that contribute to the heritage character of this site include: its location at the east end of Thorold, Ontario; the open industrial and rural character of the landscape that includes parts of the Welland Canal; the integrity of any surviving or as yet unidentified archaeological remains which may be found within the site in their original placement and extent; viewscapes from the battlefield across the Welland Canal.
Another perspective of the early morning windows reflecting their light on the walls of the building opposite it.
This time using the Contrast, B&W, Square Shooter app on the iPhone. Added a frame in Snapseed.
Thank you very very much to all our Bloggers Team, for all the great and creative job!! You are the BEST TEAM!!!
The award of September Roud goes to:
Congratss!!!
Bloggers App: forms.gle/kHpWQY8uFgx3P7LTA
T35 rolls north out of Clinton past the Southern Railway era GRS APP mast. This signal maintains a constant yellow aspect and serves simply as a warning that one is entering signaled territory–in this instance the K&O district mainline at Clinton.
Apps Used:Slow shutter cam + icolorama + stackables + Ps Express+iwatermark
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Continuing experiments with the Photoshop Camera app to add some interest to the boring 'nature' in my neighbourhood...
On this occasion I'm going for a 'night' look, like when the thin moon crescent is obscured by clouds and very few stars are seen in the sky... You can't see it? It's too dark? Well - this is night time, what did you expect? ;) ))
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Hipstamatic app on the iphone, using the Loftus lens option. I had forgotten about this filter over the last couple years. Over Christmas I tried it for a few portraits and here.
It creates an unfocused area on the perimeter.
That effect, combined with burning and dodging through luminosity based selections got this to where I liked it.