View allAll Photos Tagged Cross_Processing,
I really think I should try my hand out at potraits, 'coz that is a subject still left to explore, for me.
Anyways, this was my dumb-deaf uncle staring into the camera; my grand-dad popped into the frame, and started looking, not at the K-x, but at his son. Found a neat, balanced composition, with the in-built cross processing feature of the Pentax k-x switched on, and here's the result.
How's it?
I have been exploring the menus and options of my OM-D... I found a neat feature called Art Filter bracketing. It allows for the effects from multiple Art Filters to be applied to a single image.
digitalchemicals.blogspot.com/2013/07/exploring-om-d-art-...
About the Image: FEED USA Appetizer plate. Blueberries in a star shape... Find out more about FEED Foundation... www.thefeedfoundation.org/About-Us
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JPG from camera. Cross processing is a fun JPG mode that emulates cross processing of film (developing one type of film with another process, e.g. developing color negative film with a slide film process). It produces bizarre and somewhat random results.
The mode on the camera only works in JPG only mode (it doesn't work in RAW+JPG), so it is fun to use, as the image you get can't be "fixed" to a normal process, just like a real roll of film. You can pick different cross processing modes, but I set it to Random.
An obligatory public transport themed image in a cross-processed style. This time with two trams at Ashton-under-Lyne Metrolink stop.
This is the first roll of film I have shot with a Nikon N70. Unfortunately, the camera doesn't seem to want to always advance the film. I don't know, yet, if I want to repair it or set it aside and/or sell it.
Since it was a new camera, I gave it some 20-year-expired slide film and had it cross-processed. I'm disappointed that I didn't have wilder color effects - I almost wonder if they might have tuned the images post-scan.