View allAll Photos Tagged Gradient
A regal anthropomorphic leopard dressed as a Victorian aristocrat in full steampunk attire. The leopard wears a rust-textured copper top hat decorated with mechanical gears, cogs, tubing, and magnifying lenses. His coat is dark with ornate brass details, metallic shoulder plates, leather straps, and a pocket watch hanging from his waistcoat. The background is painted in rich, warm tones with a subtle smoky gradient. The lighting is cinematic, with soft golden highlights reflecting off polished brass and metal parts. Highly detailed fur texture, expressive feline eyes, intricate Victorian patterns, and realistic metal reflections. Ultra-realistic, fantasy portrait style, 4K, dramatic mood, steampunk Victorian elegance, masterful digital painting.
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
Taken from the train station where I usually walk by daily. Like a "gradient effect" in Photoshop, the sky over the railway "rendered" the most natural and beautiful colors I've ever seen.
Assignment: Extreme Processing.
OK, I am not much of a processor. I crop, I sharpen, I sometimes lighten shadows or adjust contrast. That's about it. So this assignment took me way outside my comfort zone! I decided to take one photo and process it three different ways. I don't know if any of them are really "extreme" - but they are for me!
For this one I used the gradient map filter. i chose one of the options (I don't know which) that gave this blue/yellow contrast. I sort of like the yellows, but it is so unrealistic for me that I don't think it is something I would choose to do most of the time.
this Zauberball was really fun to knit from, I loved watching the greens change :)
(also, wow, my knitting looks so super sloppy before blocking... ahh the magic of blocking :) )
Finished handspun from my Potentiality "Batts 2016" project.
I carded up a bunch of batts from various fibers I've collected over 8 years I've been spinning. These natural-colored fibers are mostly from a number of different classes I took. I divided them and then blended them up to make a white to black gradient.
I'm calling this colorway "Day to Night," although a friend of mine from my spinning night suggested "Seattle Rainbow." Ha!
Fibers include all sorts of wool (Merino, Cormo, Corriedale, Romney, Clun Forest, Leicester Longwool, Border Leicester, Shetland, and maybe some others), silk, alpaca, and yak.
Last night, from my living room window. I really like the almost infinite shades of blue that disappear into the burning yellow (more obvious large).
From a day trip to Dublin, my home town. the last time i had taken pictures here was almost 2 years ago