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Basic beanie hat for my nilbing, knit with two strands of yarn held together for the ombre from brown to orange to red. (They really wanted me to use the neon orange yarn, and I found enough scraps to make a blend that I thought worked).
Taken for weekly photochallenge... using a gradient map adjustment layer for toning (colour). Some interesting effects; but not wholly convinced I'll be using it a lot. Still, useful tool to have available!
i want see what i could do with gmic starting from a little render of a simple gradient
and i got almost lost i could do much more then i hoped and i love some of them almost as selfstanding images
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i want see what i could do with gmic starting from a little render of a simple gradient
and i got almost lost i could do much more then i hoped and i love some of them almost as selfstanding images
Approx 214 yards of two-ply gradient handspun spun from 4.2 oz Corgi Hill Farm 85/15 BFL Silk in the colorway Unicorn Alley 2
I didn't arrange the photos in order of their color (yet) but I thought it was so awesome how I could make my camera take photos with very different colors in the sky, all a result of using different shutter speeds, ISO settings, and white balances.
Here's an experiment i did on a picture i took this morning, was a clear winters morning with the sun rising behind the CN tower. Nice billowing smoke going into a crystal clear blue sky.
So i did the usual, levels, etc.. Then i put a gradient in, white, from bottom to top, so i could lighten the city.....not sure why, i just thought i'd play with it....