View allAll Photos Tagged Cross_Processing,

Spice up a boring photo with artificial cross-processing! Woo-hoo! Looks like The Matrix.

Decided to try some alternative editing by cross processing them. I think this works really well, retaining the colour and vibrancy whilst giving the image a historic, vintage quality - much like the subject matter!

Canon BF-800 (point-and-shoot camera); Agfa RSX II 50 ISO (expired); Epson V500; Winter 2010, Johannesburg

Photo of the day, 12-2-08.

originally posted 2-27-08.

Hendrik, she likes orange too.

cross-processed using Picnik.

Velvia 50 Cross Processed

 

Visit J B Hildebrand Photography for more street photography.

Read about these images in my Examiner Article: Cross Processed PDX.

 

© Beau Hudspeth Photography - Images may not be copied, downloaded, or used in any way without the expressed, written permission of Beau Hudspeth Photography.

 

Since I can remember I've gone to the Tulsa Philharmonic with my grandmother, who is now 87 and still attending. This was from the last concert. :)

A roll of Cinestill 50 and Rollei CR200 processed as C41 (XPRO).

I dont know if I like this. Let me know what you think. A possible Senior Portrait.

Cross Process and Lomo style

Cross Processed Film, Print Film developed in Slide Film Chemicals

Cámara: lomo lc-a+

Film: lomography color x-pro sunset strip 100ISO + cross process

West Runton, Norfolk

Cross processed

 

Edited in:

Adobe Photoshop CS4

Camera RAW

I'm playing around with Picnick.

For FGR: Happy Blurry Shit In The Background Wednesday.

For TRP: Cross Processing Anonymous

 

July 8th, 2009

KMZ Horizont/ Fuji Velvia 100F (Cross Processed)

52 weeks of 2014 - Week 8 Cross process.

I used a cross processing action I downloaded to achieve the effect. Original image is shown below in the comments.

Taken in Kew Gardens.

Canon AE-1 with 35mm Lens. Fujichrome Velvia 50ASA (expired).

 

Chemically cross processed (Processed in C-41 minilab instead of an E-6 process).

 

I ordered the cross process treatment because it's hard to find labs that develop E-6 in my town. But I made a bad decision because the cross process kills the vibrance of the colors and the Velvia vivid and rich tones.

 

No edits. Straight from the scanner. A very bad scanning job, by the way... (FNAC)

 

Estação da Bencanta, Coimbra

 

Used gear: www.flickr.com/photos/coussier/3910023530/

To the Winter Magic Festival today ... And I took photos of my kids on the train ;-)

To create this final I used one of the images taken during the light painting workshop. The equipment used was a Cannon EOS 1500D with a 50mm lens, (which had a timer set to 6 seconds), a variety of lights and a tripod. Once opening the image on Photoshop I first cropped the image to 8 inch x 6 inch @ 300ppi (4:3 ratio).

 

To cross-process the image I carried out the following process;

 

Layer > new adjustment layer > curves > press ok > adjust red, blue, green channels until desired effect.

 

I then flattened the image and saved it as a jpeg at high quality.

 

I like the patterns in this image but on reflection i would have experimented more with colour and exposure as it looks very exposed.

 

Velvia, cross-processed in C-41.

Câmera: Diana Mini /

Filme: Fuji Velvia 100 /

Teste Cross Processing

 

-Uruguai

1 2 ••• 21 22 24 26 27 ••• 79 80