View allAll Photos Tagged DistressedFx
My mini me put on her spring outfit for her birthday
and wishes she hadn’t. It’s a chilly spring this year.
The vintage doll was a Christmas gift from family
because she looks like me.
And I think she looks fabulous for her age.😝
It was -13 F on my drive in to work this morning. I stopped my vehicle and captured this barn with my Canon T2i/550D. I processed it on the iPad using Google Snapseed creating a B&W image. Then I processed it with DistressedFX to reintroduce color and add texture.
Thor Speaks
Thor Speaks, Ravens Fly,
at Bjornafjorden,
Change comes to the Earth...
©️R/Merz #Haiku
Digital artwork created on an iPad Pro using iColorama, DistressedFX and Skylab, from an original photograph— ©R/Merz/PhotoArt All Rights Reserved
Image from 2023 after using DistressedFX and Snapseed. Finch Multiply 60% and Charm Softlight 100%. Bright preset in Snapseed and border #4. LRM-007
Vehicle at the July 5th Conejo Valley Cars and Coffee event taken with Bluristic iPhone app. Textured added with DistressedFX and Snapped apps.
Today's image was taken in Allesley Village. The view is of Stone House. The Grade II* Listed building which dates from the 16th century is one of the oldest still standing in the village.
The photo was taken using the App ExposerGL on my iPhone 6.
First I used the app Handy Photo to edit the image. I used the app to change the White balance and boost the sharpness a little. I also used the retouch function to clean up the picture by deleting the TV aerial from near one of the chimney's and taking away the road markings. I also deleted the two alarm boxes from the main house wall. Next I used the app Lens Flare to add the flare called Desert Sun to the street lamp. After this I used DistressedFX to add the Stirred overlay and the Bliss texture. Finally I used the app PhotoToaster to apply the Vanity Fair preset and the Antique frame.
Houses along a canal in #Copenhagen. IPhone photo edited on iPad Pro using #IColorama #elasticam #distressedfx
Shot and edited on the iPhone just outside of London, Ontario Canada
(Prints available in my Etsy shop - see profile for link)
The last sunset of 2013...
'it looks like a painting' vs. 'it looks like a photo'...nature/art...what mimics what (iPhone5s)
The present Killarney House was once the stable block of a French chateau style residence that you would find in Normandy and Brittany. It was built by Valentine Browne in the mid 1720s. Later a large red brick mansion was constructed at Knockreer in the 1870s. This ornate building became the principal seat of the Kenmare estate and the 18th Century chateaux was then demolished.
Unfortunately the red brick mansion was near destroyed by fire in 1913. The stable block of the original house was remodeled as a residence for the Browne’s and their staff between 1913 and 1915.
In 1952 the estate was inherited by Beatrice Grosvenor, a niece of Gerald Browne, the last Earl of Kenmare. By 1956 Mrs Grosvenor sold a portion of the estate to a property development syndicate based in the United States of America. In 1959 John McShain, a successful building contractor from Philadelphia, bought the estate outright. The estate, which included Killarney House, Innisfallen and Ross Castle were generously donated to the Republic of Ireland by the McShain family.
The image today was taken early this evening in Coventry City Centre. It is a view looking up a cobbled lane in the Cathedral quarter called Hill Top. The Spire that can be seen in in the background belongs to the Grade I listed Holy Trinity Church.
The photo was taken using the App VividHDR on my iPhone 6.
First I used the app Snapseed to straighten the image. I then used some selective editing to lower the glare of the lamps. Next I applied the Tonal Contrast filter along with a small vignette. I then used the app ShockMyPic to give the image a slight painterly look. Next I used DistressedFX to add the birds using the Trio birds overlay and the Bliss texture. I then flattened the image and added the Lily overlay and the Lade texture. Finally I used PhotoToaster to add the Recover Highlights preset, the Drama FX, the Canvas texture and the Charcoal frame.
37/365 - apps used: wood camera, procamera, glaze, segmantix, Snapseed, superimpose, mextures, distressedfx
To have chickens is to have chickens escape. We once had a chicken walk into out backyard. No one claimed her. We called her "Chickie". She laid an egg every day. She went through years of bugs hidden in deep foliage..
Sketchbook, DistressedFX, Adobe Mix, sketchbook blending modes.
Today's image was taken this evening just outside Coventry, in the Village of Baginton. The view is of the Main Gatehouse of the Lunt Roman Fort. The Fort which is a Scheduled Ancient monument, is an authentic recreation of a Roman military outpost that was built on the original architectural excavation site. It is thought that the original Fort complex was built in about the year 60 AD, during the Roman campaign in England against rebels that were led by Queen Boudica of the Iceni tribe. One of the most unique features of the Fort was the addition of a Gyrus (to the left side of the Gatehouse) which was used to train Horses.
The photo was taken using the app Cortex Camera on my iPhone 6.
First I used the app Snapseed to edit the photo. I cropped and straightened the image and applied the Tonal Contrast filter. I then decreased the Highlights to help bring out the details in the clouds. I also boosted the Saturation, Vibrance and Contrast. Next I used the app DistressedFX to add the Birds to the sky above the Gyrus and the Charm texture. Finally I used the app PhotoToaster to add the Backlit preset, the Vibrant FX and a small dark vignette. I then added the Stucco texture and the Antique frame.