View allAll Photos Tagged OVER-PROCESSED
I haven't done much saturated colour til now. It is quite liberating. Normal service will be resumed tomorrow,....
Over processed in Lightroom and Picnik
A submission to Sliders Sunday, where over-processing is encouraged. A swan on Manly Dam in the late afternoon. HSS to all!
A submission to Sliders Sunday, where over-processing is encouraged. Two sundew plants in Manly Dam.
Ok, so I've gone a bit far on this but it is supposed to be fantasy.
The wolf is always the bad guy in fairy tales.
Shot this the day I got my Sony a6000, 3 exposure HDR +/- 2 ev. Coming out of Photomatix, the sky looked over-processed. I used OneOne's tone correction to lighten shadows on the top half of the image, and added a border with the same software.
After listening to this song and then Corneille's album, I actually fell in love with this guy :)
Mesmerizing voice he's got!
D’où je viens ?
Très loin
Où je vais
Personne le sait…
En
attendant je vous dis où je suis
****
Je suis
seul au monde
Y’a rien à faire, j’suis seul au monde
Je veux plus le
taire, j’suis seul au monde
Je me sens seul au monde
Cheers~
Yo E X P L O R E D #291, 6th Nov 2008
Wow!! Elsewhere in the World of Love, HairVana Soul foregoes her over-processed curly hairstyle, for a full-blown afro"'do" which can be seen from space!! OuttaSite!!
911 Lake Avenue, Gothenburg, Nebraska.
E.G. West was one of five men appointed to serve as trustees of Gothenburg when it was first incorporated on July 8, 1885. He was on the board of education in 1910, when the north building of the school was built. E.G. West Park was donated to the City of Gothenburg in 1929, the year of E.G.'s death.
E. G. West Park is located at 516 20th Street in Gothenburg, Nebraska
Note: Some of my Nebraska 2013 photos may have been posted back in 2013 but some may have been deleted by Flickr during some sort of electronic glitch or change over process.
I certainly didn't delete any pictures.
A submission to Sliders Sunday, where over-processing is encouraged. A sunset at Noosa (Australia), which is also a demonstration of the "Rule of Thirds".
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.
Despite the obviously over-processed image, I chose to genuinely paint in the bite marks. Somehow it gave it more authenticity.
(Although if you look closely, you can still see the real bite I mentioned earlier)
Strobist: Metz 58 @ 1/16. with stofen. On light stand, camera right. Cactus Trigger.
Christmas Nutcracker figurine- ramped up colour, filter, blur etc etc! I like the kitsch Christmas style!
I over processed this to preserve some amount of privacy for our BFFs. they are about as Wild as Life comes!
The other day I was sure i preferred my first composition: Now I'm not so sure though I think this is a bit over processed
The pink was really strong in the raw file such that I had to tone it back a bit, and even then, it still looks over processed. But this was exactly what I saw. Definitely a magical morning :)
Sorry about the over-processing in this shot. Because the lighting in the showroom was pretty bad, I've been experimenting on some HDR shots; hoping to bring out more details. Unfortunately, I am bad at PP! Please let me know what you think of this edit.
I've got another vid of the MC Stradale revving (Auto v/s Race mode); will upload it soon!
Btw; this pic has a very subtle watermark ;)
100/365
And we'll all float on, ok.
And we'll all float on, ok.
And we'll all float on, ok.
- from "Float On" by Modest Mouse
One hundred days! Nearly a third of the way through. This was hard to do because I forgot to take an empty space shot. I hope they cloud texture doesn't detract. I also feel it's over processed. Alas.
One of the challenges a photographer has is how to use the light. In this case the background is white and tends to make the subject matter underexposed. There is this fine line between trying to get the best of both worlds of being over and underexposed. You hope you can correct some of the problems in post processing but that can add more problems of noise and over processing where you lose so much detail.
So quite often a photographer is trying to make the best out of a less than ideal situation.
My "recipe":
You will need--
+Some sort of tasty peanut butter, not the gross over processed kind (I like Adams Crunchy)
+Powdered sugar
+Chocolate chips
+cupcake papers
+double boiler (see note)
+cookie sheet or plate
+ ELO's greatest hits on the stereo (I would say this is optional but... it really isn't)
Put a few good sized dollops of peanut butter into a bowl. Add enough powdered sugar to make it pleasantly sweet and sturdy in texture. Melt a bunch of chocolate chips in a double boiler (note: if you don't have a double boiler, and who the hell does, here's how to make one, though I usually skip the aluminum foil part. Or just melt the chocolate over regular heat, but DON'T LET THAT SHIT BURN.)
Place cupcake papers on a cookie sheet, plate, or other moveable flat surface. Once the chocolate is fully melted, place a heaping spoonful in the bottom of a cupcake paper. Spread it around so it evenly coats the bottom, drawing it up the sides of the paper a bit. Next, place a dollop of the peanut butter mixture onto the chocolate, and flatten it down a bit. Then, spoon more chocolate over the top, completely encasing the peanut butter. Repeat as many times as you'd like, depending on the insatiability of your appetite. Place sheet of little tasties in the fridge to set. Once the chocolate hardens, the papers will be easily peeled away. Strange magic, indeed!
old school:noun (often of/from the old school)
used, usually approvingly, to refer to someone or something that is old-fashioned or traditional.
Over processed but very cool high school in Bratislava.
Woke up to -27F, going out with Rebeak and alaskanshelly to take more photos of objects in the snow. I have so many layers of clothes on, I can hardly move:)
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.
A submission to Sliders Sunday, where over-processing is encouraged. A walker on Sydney's Manly Beach, on a morning whose frama is enhanced by Photoshopping!
Battersea Power Station in London. It's the building on the album cover "Animals" - Pink Floyd.
I find the over-processing works here, since I had that album cover in the back of my mind.
Major party, Vegas style. A little over-processed with the tonemapping, but that's what Vegas is all about, amiright? HSS Y'all!
Samsung Galaxy S5 Mini camera. The Galaxy S5 Mini sports an 8-megapixel rear camera and 2.1-megapixel front-facer, and both are relatively competent mid-range shooters. The layout of the camera app largely mirrors that of the GS5, the main exception being that the HDR (or "rich tone," as it's called) now lives in the "modes" menu, as opposed to being accessible from the grid layout. At the same time you don't get a real-time HDR previews, and HDR shots take longer to process.
A DECENT MID-RANGE CAMERA, WITH ONE SLIGHT WEAKNESS.
The GS5 Mini's rear camera generally takes good-looking shots — better than the HTC One Mini 2's 13-megapixel camera, at any rate. Most of the time you'll get pleasing shots without any of the aberrations associated with low-quality smartphone sensors: visible noise, mushy over-processed images, artefacting or washed-out color. On the whole, particularly in daylight, the Mini captures decent-looking photos with a plenty of fine detail. Look up close and you'll see evidence of software sharpening, but even that's not too obnoxious.
yes more early morning boats, at least it isnt over-processed, pretty much what it was like. A few tweaks of the RAW file during conversion is about all that was done.
A bit of an odd photo this, but I kind of like it. It looks slightly better over-processed than it did in the camera.
Taken on my trip to the Art Gallery of New South Wales in Sydney last month.