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🌟 Calling All Second Life Digital Dreamdolls! Unleash Your Creativity and Win Big! 🌟
Are you a virtual fashion icon, a trendsetter, or a style-savvy avatar? Second Life's ultimate contest, the "BackBone Digital Doll" challenge, is tailor-made for you! Dress to impress, pick your perfect tagline, and get ready for a virtual photoshoot like never before!
How to Enter:
Dress Up: Flaunt your fabulous fashion sense and create a jaw-dropping avatar look.
Tagline Time: Choose a snazzy tagline that perfectly complements your avatar's charm.
Strike a Pose: Step into our "Baebie" or "Kevin" Digital Doll Box and strike your most captivating pose.
Capture the Moment: Take a snapshot that showcases your virtual allure.
🎁 Prizes: The competition is fierce, but the rewards are phenomenal! The winner will receive a whopping 10,000L Gift Card, granting access to an exclusive shopping spree. Not one, but two lucky runners-up will receive a generous 5,000L Gift Card each to splurge on their heart's desires in our Main Store!
📅 Deadline: Don't miss this chance to shine! Submissions will be accepted until July 31st. So, seize the opportunity and show off your style prowess to the world!
🏆 How to Participate:
Snap your glamorous photo within the "Baebie" or "Kevin" box.
The Digital Doll boxes are discounted in our Main Store 50% until end of the Month: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/BackBone/34/174/2106
Tag us on Facebook or Twitter to enter your submission.
📅 Winners will be announced on FB, Twitter and VIP Group August 1st, 2023
Original Abstract Digital Painting with Procreate, Apple Pencil, and iPad Pro.
I’m trying to get looser in my work. Chaos does not come naturally to me. I did a series of three action paintings all in one sitting. I was happy with the first and last, they are presented here As Action Painting #3 and action Painting #5. They were all done in the same Photoshop file so I was also able to combine them as layers in different combinations. One of those is also presented here.
Not a comparison in the classical meaning, just a look at two systems. The left picture was shot with a Hasselblad using b/w-film and a light red filter combined with a polarising filter. The negative was digitized with a resolution of 3600 dpi and cropped to 3000px at 300 dpi. The right picture is a digital frame, cropped to get a similar image section, using a yellow filter. The PhaseOne IQ4 Achromatic has a resolution of 150 MP. Both pictures are high qualitiy, but the impression of the analog is more emotional. The digital picture is more technical - highest level you can get, but somehow cold. For both pictures: Only a little post-processing, mainly contrast. Please tell me about your opinion...
Digital collage after Catrin Arno or Catrin Welz-Stein for Digitalmania.
Beauty: Last Door Down the Hall, Texture: ML Stock.
The yellow rope tied from the guava tree to the fence begged to be used to drape fabric over it. I took a short nap in here today, with a lemon tree silhouette and gold hearts over my face. A stray black cat has taken a liking to my tent, and I imagine it is his den, and he brings his harem of cat sluts into my tent. Damn cat.
This is an iPhone photo of a kitty hiding in a batch of lupine flowers, digitally enhanced with painterly type effects to create a colorfully dramatic springtime piece.
Vintage Nikon Digital (CCD Sensor) - 3 (of 15) - Nikon D50 (2005) with AF-S Nikkor 18-55mm 1:3.5-5.6G VR Zoom (F mount) - Photographer Russell McNeil PhD (Physics) lives on Vancouver Island, where he works as a writer.
This former filling station and repair shop has been converted to offices for a marketing company. Thanks for your view.
I've named this artwork (Star Trails)... If you have ever seen long exposure Astrophotoraphy, the stars will become (over time) a blur of light as the camera captures the stars in an arc shape. A camera interprets the movement of stars across the image sensor or film as transit light. They are called Star Trails. So, I attempted to simulate this photograph effect using a filter called a "Radial Blur" filter. It's fascinating to know that you are looking back in time when looking up at the stars, as their light takes so very long (thousands or millions of years traveling at the speed of light) to reach our eyes. I hope you like it! Artwork by Dan Seitzinger, Copyright DMS Studios, DanMar Creations.