View allAll Photos Tagged Cross_Processing,
test pictures for work..... effect from being left out in 103 degree weather for and hour and then having to hand crank them through the develop machine. i liked how these ones came out.
I've actually delt with the Santa Barbara Police. They weren't much help to tell the truth. In this case it was a domestic disturbance down the street from me. 30 second exposure I think.
It all started when we were cleaning out the photo club's locker. We found an old, expired disposable camera inside and nobody knew where it came from. Instead of throwing it out, I took it home and shot the roll in one weekend, eventually cross-processing it in some leftover E6 chemicals I had from my slide film processing. Since this is C41 (Color Negative) film, processed in E6 (Color Slide) chemicals, I expected some wild colors and strange effects. The result is actually strangely accurate to real life...
A vineyard in Jordan Station, Ontario
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.
King Street, Caboolture.
Camera - Holga 120 CFN
Film - Fuji Provia 400F
Process - Cross processed C-41
I recently heard of something called cross processing, apparently the Big Thing back in the 1980s. So I wanted to try it out (in photoshop, of course) Here is my first try - I'm not that impressed, but this shot wasn't meant for that kind of treatment. I need to try some more portraits and shoot them strictly to be cross processed. Then we'll see how they come out.
Cross-processed view of Hesitation Point at Brown County State Park. Some of my bike rides start from here.
I added three adjustment layers to adjust red, green and blue levels individually. Burned darker areas, added an overlay to 50% opacity and fill, and then flatten the image together.
This is basically how i get my cross processing tone in Photoshop. I used Photo Filter, Curve, Hue/Saturation and Color Balance. No plugin required.