View allAll Photos Tagged OVER-PROCESSED

As something new, I'm showing the original of my photos on my blog www.caughtinpixels.com and tries to explain what I have done with my photo. This is something I will file under Before and After. I start out with one, that I have really worked hard and don't know if I went over the edge and over processed it, maybe you can tell me? The sky was dramatic and had wonderful colors, but I have really extracted them quite brutally, but I do like the result. I think it's nice.

 

© 2011 Patricia L Walker All Rights Reserved. My images are not to be used, copied, edited, or blogged without my written permission.

 

322/365

 

Apps Used:

Camera+

Dramatic B&W

Photo Studio

Iris PhotoSuite

Impression

 

Cliche: selfie, mirror, over-processed processing.

A portion of an art sculpture that kinda got a bit bent during some over processing for sliders Sunday.Trying to do something different for me. HSS

Over Processed To Enhance The Colors

A submission to Sliders Sunday, where over-processing is encouraged. This is a Flannel Flower, a wildflower which blooms in the Sydney bushland in summer.

Iconic New York shot - The Flat Iron Building Wanted the detail of an HDR....but didn't want it to feel over processed or over coloured. I really like the fact that the smiling face on top of the building is so clear, and the dome is so yellow...and I love the sky.

I looked at some of Rumblemumbles travel photos from Russia and she has some good images there.

 

This was a HDR combination of 2 shots taken at slightly different times, in roughly the same aspect. I ticked the "Align Images" box thinking it would do a poor effort, but was suitably surprised with the result, overlooking the 2 guys who appear to be kissing. We know that can't be true, as you could end up spending years in the Gulags if caught doing that.

 

This is a ridulously over-processed HDR, but it appealed to me. Maybe I was thinking Chernobyl.

A little over processed, but I like the patterns.

Sharon Woods Park, Sharonville, OH (Cincinnati)

Result of the Polar Vortex that has been plaguing the Midwest.

 

I had to remove the first copy, over-processed. oops.

Last shot with Jordyn...have edited the pics I like..sort of...good night everyone!

 

Are the eyes over processed?

 

See it bigger here!

 

strobist info:

f5.6 1/200 ISO200

camera left at 1/4

camera right is the sun

  

74/100 - 100x: The 2022 Edition - 100 Over Processed / Over Adjusted Photos

 

More fun with neural filters in Photoshop. Converted the original daytime late fall scene to a wintry scene!

 

More dicking around with old photos

I think I may have over-processed this a little trying to emphasise the beautiful orange eye of this grebe

HDR Shot of some clouds. Probably a bit over processed but I couldn't help myself. I saw these clouds so I had to do a quick run to the country to snap a few pics.

Purposefully over processed. I wanted to bring out any and all of the colors around and exaggerate them. This is what i got.

A submission to Sliders Sunday, where over-processing is encouraged. Tow birds at Taronga Zoo, Sydney.

Close-up street portrait (outdoor low-angle head shot, full-face view) of Yandi, a modern, young Sherpa woman from the Himalayas;

Everest Base Camp Trek, Thokla (c. 4,620 mamsl), Solukhumbu, Himalayas, East Nepal.

 

More context:

Trekking to Everest Base Camp (photo blog),

Post-processing Street Portraits (photo blog),

Finding the Right Camera Angle (photo blog),

Doing a Background Check (photo blog).

Just playing with software and kind of like this in an over-processed sort of way. Opinions welcome, good or bad.

(image is bigger and looks better with a dark background if you click on it)

 

Wow, today is starting off weird. Have you ever had an image that you poured over, processed for hours, uploaded to your blog, published it and then actually LOOKED at it and realized it had major flaws? Halos? Dust spots?

 

How did you miss that? How is it possible you looked over that whole image for hours and it took this new eye of viewing it on your blog that made you REALLY see it?

 

Well, I'm honest enough about this stuff...happened to me today. Even after previewing it before publishing on Flickr I didn't notice what I noticed later. So I took it down. Paranoia. I don't like sub-par stuff from myself.

 

Think it all goes back to taking your time. A lesson I need to learn. Sometimes I rush through processing just to get it up on the website and I end up missing things. That's not what happened today. This was just a lack of really paying attention at the time of processing. Also dust spots are a HUGE thing that I miss and I see others missing. You just don't notice it well enough. I have to usually make myself stop and search them out.

 

NOW...this image is from the abandoned dog track north of Phoenix. I took a lot of shots while I there that one day and I still might have a few left in the tank to show at some point. What's funny about this image and some others who have shot there recently is that some of sections of chairs don't really look too old when framed in a certain way.

 

(exif: canon rebel xsi, canon 50mm 1.4, f/2.0, iso 100)

 

2 x 30 second exposures from my dashboard. Over-processed, rotated and smudged together with GIMP.

View On Black

 

Just bringing the daily scene to life. I try to take just an ordinary shot and make it interesting. I didn't want to over-process this one.

Check out this ridiculously over-processed image of Hollywood Studios' Crossroads of the World! I love this spot in the park, especially now that my Chinese Theater has made a reappearance.

best viewed large | original | My top 100

 

Where do you live, Vancouverites? Leave a note on the photo.

 

Title is meant to evoke the old Fritz Lange film. I was thinking about how the grain and distortion in this reminded me of old B&W film. Metropolis is one of my all time favs.

 

Aerial of Vancouver shot from a helicopter. Single RAW file massively processed. PseudoHDR then lots of other stuff done. Can't remember. Been working on it on and off for two days, and it probably shows over-processing in spades. Kinda reminds me of film. Oh well. I like it.

 

That's our wonderful Stanley Park in the foreground.

Jawbone Canyon is a geographic feature in the Mojave Desert and a Bureau of Land Management area located in Kern County, California, 20 miles (32 km) north of Mojave on CA 14. The area is a popular destination for hikers and off road vehicle enthusiasts.

 

Europeans first settled in the canyon around 1860—naming it Jawbone because its shape resembled a mandible—and the trail was used as a trade route from Keyesville into the Piute Mountains (not to be confused with the Piute Mountains of the eastern Mojave Desert). During the Kern River gold rush, several gold mines operated in the canyon; the most successful of these, the St. John mine, yielded nearly $700,000 worth of gold between 1860 and 1875. The Gwynn mine, on the Geringer Grade, ran six claims yielding a total of $770,000 worth of gold and quartz before ceasing operations in 1942. Mining continued throughout the 1940s, mainly focused on rhyolite and antimony.

 

Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jawbone_Canyon

  

Note: These images were taken with the Samsung S22 Ultra, which I have since returned because I find the images over-processed, but I'm posting them as a review of that device, and because this was a new-to-me area.

 

Sorry about the poor quality but I only had an over-processed 3x4 print to work from.

 

1340 "Trojan" was built by the Avonside Co. Bristol,in 1897 (works no. 1386),for Mssrs. Dunn & Shute,Newport Town Dock.In 1903 she was sold to the Alexandra Docks Railway,which was incorporated into the Great Western Railway in 1923.

 

Further sales took place in July 1932,when the loco went to Netherseal Colliery,Burton On Trent,and in 1947,to Alders (Tamworth) Ltd. The loco is now preserved at the Didcot Railway Centre.

 

This undated shot is from the collection of the late P.J.Edwards,and,I would guess would be from Alders Paper Mill,Tamworth,early to mid 1960s..There is another loco in the background,but unidentified I'm afraid.Possibly Andrew Barclay 1576 of 1918.

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Shot on Kodak EKTACHROME 200 (E200) at EI 200.

Color reversal (slide) film in 120 format shot as 6x6.

Cross processed.

Over processed one stop.

  

More at:

emulsive.org/photography/medium-format/no-parking-at-any-...

 

Filed under:

#film, #filmphotography, #believeinfilm, #120_Medium_Format, #6X6, #EI_200, #EI_400, #EMULSIVE_Daily_Photo, #ISO_200, #ISO_400, #Kodak, #Kodak_EKTACHROME_200, #Lomography, #Lomography_Diana_Pinhole_Operator, #Pinhole, #Push_Processing, #Pushing_Film, #Medium_format, #Photography

I took this in the hotel where I stayed last week.

 

Its a swing actually...i loved its rusted curved sidebars n so set about making max use of "nifty fifty".

 

I'm into pastel, dreamy, cloudy and over processed looks these past few weeks.

 

This time, as I was cooped up inside a hotel, I had to find beauty in everyday mundane things. You can check out more of my shots there in my blog too as I cannot upload every single one in flickr due to my limited account.

 

Blog |why i love travelling|

 

View On Black

 

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critical feedback is always welcome!

single raw slightly over processed to bring out loads of detail.

taken through a skywatcher 250 telescope

A couple of old shots of the Cadillac - I've shared these before but my style at the time was to seriously over process things - these are much more to my liking these days.

Commando memorial. Spean Bridge. Scotland.

Over processed sky for dramatic effect.

I'm leaving for a couple of days. Have a great weekend everyone!

[44:52]

 

You woke up screaming aloud

A prayer from your secret god

You feed off our fears

And hold back your tears

Give us a tantrum

And a know it all grin

Just when we need one

When the evening's thin

Building a Mystery - Sarah Mclachlan

 

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Once again, I waited too long to shoot this week and by the time Saturday rolled around I knew I was in trouble. I ended up waiting so long that I had to use Nard's camera to shoot this and because I'm so unfamiliar with how his camera works it took me a lot longer than usual and I still wasn't very happy with the results.

 

The focus is off and I chose the wrong colour shirt to wear, which I didn't notice until after I'd finished shooting and had transferred the images to the computer.

 

But this will have to do because it's Sunday morning and I don't want to set everything back up to re-shoot; laziness wins out this week.

 

Hopefully by the time I shoot next week's photo I've gotten the hang of how his camera works and I'll have an easier time of it.

 

Hope everyone has had a good week.

 

Click "L" for a larger view.

View On Black

 

Behind Little Stony Man Cliffs - Shenandoah National Park

 

This is an interesting shot, and it's not as over-processed as one might first think.

 

The sun is setting in the west (to the right in this photo) and the light is basically hitting the treeline from below. The leaves were all browned out on this particular line of trees, so the unique angle of the light and the brown leaves, coupled with the inherent saturation from an HDR shot gives it this look.

 

It was very windy, so even with a tripod there is a small amount of shake. 5 shot HDR with combine in Photomatix and curves in PS. Did not change any colors, and in fact toned down the saturation some in PS.

Another group shot of yesterdays pintail. Due to the light being into the birds faces I've processed this to bring out the colours of the ducks plumage however this has created this void like sky - pintails in the no-thingness if you like.

 

I quite like the effect as it completely isolates the ducks - don't feel obliged to comment as an experiment really.

 

Go Large.

"Alex Jones: We have got to realize that we're being conditioned on a mass scale. Start challenging this corporate slave state" - Waking Life (2001)

 

i know it looks over processed and all but nothing seem to be going right...

 

"It's not that unusual, when everything is beautiful,

It's just another ordinary miracle today" — Sarah McLachlan

 

Flutterbies, fantasy and fun for cliché saturday ... and a big thank you to my daughter for letting me do this to her!

 

A very belated Happy Cliché Saturday!

you hear the breeze weaving between the peaks and the valleys..

and you hear the chip of birds basking in the glory of freedom...

you also hear the grass touch the stones...gently growing in the light...

its so silent that you hear it all...and every sound is as though...

its made in silence...hushed...in harmony with the flow of nature...

silent sounds....that keep you silent...for hours...

with the wind, with the birds, with the grass, with the water...

together...in awe of that Mother we call Nature...

 

- from me to you...because it takes 'one' to know 'one'

...........................................................................................................................................................................

 

Image taken near the Lamayuru monastery in in the Ladakh Himalayas.

Known as one of the oldest and largest monasteries in Ladakh, it was built in the 10th Century by two practitioners of Tantric Buddhism and is located in the most fantastic geological folds and schist's rock surroundings, popularly called 'moonscape' thanks to the feel it gives you of being on an alien planet.

 

The site where the monastery stands was once said to be a huge lake. A buddhist saint "Naropa" meditated here for years to cause a crack in the mountain which drained out the lake and gave him the place to lay the founding stones.When the lake dried out, he found a dead lion lying inside it. On the same spot, he constructed the first temple of the area, known as the Singhe Ghang (Lion Mound).

 

Lamayuru also marks the meeting place of the Great Himalayan Wall and the East Karakorum Himalaya Ranges.

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The image will be the first of a series of images that are being re-worked and re-posted. There were reviews that i was making my HDR images look like cheap snapshots from a phone camera by boxing them with a frame around as well as with some over processing in the colors and vibrance, so some of my favorite images may be seen again...look forward to all your feedback and critique on the newly processed versions.

Red Rock Canyon State Park features scenic desert cliffs, buttes and spectacular rock formations. The park is located where the southernmost tip of the Sierra Nevada converge with the El Paso Range. Each tributary canyon is unique, with dramatic shapes and vivid colors.

 

Historically, the area was once home to the Kawaiisu Indians, who left petroglyphs in the El Paso mountains and other evidence of their inhabitation. The spectacular gash situated at the western edge of the El Paso mountain range was on the Native American trade route for thousands of years. During the early 1870s, the colorful rock formations in the park served as landmarks for 20-mule team freight wagons that stopped for water. About 1850, it was used by the footsore survivors of the famous Death Valley trek including members of the Arcane and Bennett families along with some of the Illinois Jayhawkers. The park now protects significant paleontology sites and the remains of 1890s-era mining operations, and has been the site for a number of movies.

 

After wet winters, the park's floral displays are stunning. The beauty of the desert, combined with the geologic features make this park a camper's favorite destination. Wildlife you may encounter includes roadrunners, hawks, lizards, mice and squirrels.

 

Note: These images were taken with the Samsung S22 Ultra, which I have since returned because I find the images over-processed, but I'm posting them as a review of that device

Taken with a Sony A700, Carl Zeiss 16-80mm F/3.5-4.5 Zoom lens (SAL-1680z)

Taken at: 16mm, f/6.3, 1/30 sec., ISO 640

The Chrome Heart Of A Grunged-up Mini.

Is There A Support Group For Image Over-processors?

HSS!

My first HTC M9 image that I have processed in Lightroom. Any tips appreciated as only just started using this program. I tried to bring the dog (he's called Walter by the way) more to the front whilst still keeping the tint of fading pink sunset in the background. Have I over processed?

I deliberately over processed the water in pp here because I liked the effect whilst larking about in levels!

This is a fighting fish that I am caring for while his family decided to go swimming in Mexico. Perhaps I over-processed this image...I just wanted to do something colorful and abstract as I feel he is lonely and could use a bit of light and cheering up.

Looking down upon Edinburgh from above, we see a night scene in the city, cars and people making their way as the evening draws to a close. Just a few effects added to this, hopefully not to over-processed. This night time city scene from a while ago that I have finally managed to process interests me and tells a number of stories as we look at the peoples lives.

A submission to Sliders Sunday, where over-processing is encouraged.

Festival Wedding

a tad over processed - but this is a Photoshop edit of a phone picture

yikes, creepy ho coming up the sidewalk. go inside.

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