View allAll Photos Tagged OVER-PROCESSED
This isn't new but it is highly over processed. I love this car and decided to enhance everything a bit.
My YIP for today. It's over-processed for my liking, but I'm tired of looking at my face. :-) I need lots of work on my editing still.
But hey! My eyes are in focus. That's an improvement. :-)
And here's another one of my fave songs--this version rocks.
something about these shots of the yellow reflection in the stream with dark woods around is not translating well to the photo. I can never get the color quite right and they always look a bit over processed.
I think this one is better, more accurate to the scene as it was irl.
2005. Phoenix. 11 x 14 inches / 30 x 35.5 centimeters. Offset Lithography. Four color process. Overprinting: process black over process cyan over process yellow. 20 pages. Saddle stitched. Design by Weed.
Maybe a bit over processed? Been playing with a free software I got PhotoDirector. I wouldn't have paid for it but not bad for free.
Many of my works - like this one - are produced entirely digitally. I sometimes re-use older works as art elements and also drawing objects - usually rectangles. These are combined together using Serif PagePlus X3.
Next I mesh warp the image and finally photographically over process the image with Paint Shop Pro.
This is a map of Hainan Island.
Small CCD camera, high ISO, heavily cropped, and over-processed by me, so I know, you can barely read it.
I didn't visit the cultural village-savageray village. Are you crazy? Maybe it's a novelty for Chinese people to see savagery, but I grew up in Newfoundland (Canada), and I went to China to get away from barbarism and savagery and experience a real civilization...not to see savagery, there is plenty of that in my hometown.
Photo COPYRIGHT 2008/2009 Django Malone
If I over process this, you can barely tell it is a last minute shot for the day. I've been slaving over a hot laptop for the last 7 hours.
Almost.
Done.
By the final day of the convention, my events were over. With a little free time for shooting, I decided to head over to St. Paul to capture some images of this incredible cathedral. The over-processed crazy sky works for me because of the caos that was unfolding just outside of the camera viewfinder. The protesters were in full swing causing the local authorities to shut down the bridge into the older part of town and the convention center.....trapping most of them in a controlled space. I looked over the fiasco from the top of the hill, laughed a bit as I shook my head, captured some exterior shots, went in to grab a few interiors, called my driver, and safely headed back to my Minneapolis. I will post a few more shots of this incredible landmark over the next couple of days!
Have a great weekend!
Many of my works - like this one - are produced entirely digitally. I sometimes re-use older works as art elements and also drawing objects - usually rectangles. These are combined together using Serif PagePlus X3.
Next I mesh warp the image and finally photographically over process the image with Paint Shop Pro.
Another Shot of Spencer leading through the upper portion of Orange Crush (5.9) @ Horseshoe Canyon Ranch, maybe a little over-processed, but trying to figure out some photoshop filters.
One of the shots from saturdays meet in stockton at autosport. a little over processed in my opinion, still testing edits.
john and anthony know how to throw a party. wish i could have made it earlier to get down on those roof shots. they looked sick.
be sure to check out anthony's page and vipdout.com. and ill be sure to supply more when the sun decides to wake me up.
Picture of Nobuo this afternoon, perhaps a bit on the over-processed side... That's definitely his favorite place and pose, though.
LANDON'S NEW HAIR... THIS WAS A TOTAL MAKEOVER. I DID LOWLIGHTS WITH 6N AND AN ALL OVER TONER OF 09NB. THEN I DID THE COPPOLA KERATIN BLOWOUT TO REPAIR AND SMOOTH HER HAIR THAT HAD BEEN DAMAGED FROM OVER PROCESSING. IT TURNED OUT GORGEOUS!!
One of the two versions of an over-processed photo... Fisheye Lens and then HDR and a dozen of filters...
Another Thursday that I'll spend at work with very dirty feet, will I ever do this on a dry morning?! Ah well. HLTLT everyone :-)
15.08.13
For some reason all the shots came out OTT on the red side so made the most of what I could with this over processed HDR
The village is making a real effort this year to get through to the regional finals of the village of the year. I hope the judges turn a blind eye to the amount of pot holes that we have! The flower festival at St George's Church was well worth going to.
I couldn't resist over processing this image to create a faded 19th century look to add variety to the many fabulous cloud formations that appeared and disappeared at sunrise this morning. Severe prolonged weather conditions produce high altitude cloud formations lise the ones on the upper left. These are the same weather conditions that produce severe prolonged drought, which most of Texas has been locked into for 6 years. Most of the state got some good rains in the winter and spring, and are no longer in the "severe" category. But southern Texas,from just north of Austin south to the border have worsened. In late June are reservoir levels for Travis county (Austin) broke the record low of 1951, putting us in the "critical" category. This means that unless there is meterological miracle, like a level 4-5 level hurricane makes a direct hit on the south Texas coast SOON, we will have to resort to draconian water restrictions and "rolling brownouts", which have been disasters in every part of the country that has needed to employ them. There has never had such an event in Texas even though we have frequent droughts. Even though there are no natural lakes of useful size to support urban populations, Texas has a vast number of lakes built by the Army Corp of Engineers, because in the 40's a Texan named Sam Rayburn, was in the middle of his 30 year reign as Speaker of the House (which was controlled by the Democrats. Then in the 50's the Texas contingent to Congress added the brilliant young politician Lyndon Baines Johnson, as junior Senator. He quickly displayed his brilliance as a dealmaker and an arm twister, who didn't hesitate to call in favors to get things done. As a result he rose like a shooting star to Senate Majority Leader, and continued to "get things done" collecting loyalty and the resulting owed favors along the way. So, Texas, having control of both houses became the king of pork. Texas got whatever it wanted when it came to federal projects like military bases and dams. The home boys were smart enough to realize that water was the key to Texas long term economic growth and diversification, since even the Oil State knew the oil couldn't last forever. So, there choice of pork was federally funded dams/lakes carefully positionsed all over the state, to drought proof the state for over a hundred years. but that was based on past weather patterns, mostly in the 20th century. Climate modelers made a breakthrough shortly after Katrina, usning pollen data (Chaos theory predicts that major breakthroughs in our thinking about the nature of the world come from totally unexpected sources). Using the extensive pollen data, mostly already in hand, and studied for other reasons, was fed into the Cray Supercomputers and reverse engineered the data, to come up with a "map" of world and regional climate for the past 160 millions years or so. To their astonishment, the map was perfect as verified by major climate changes that we know for other reasons exactly when these events occurred. Two key results were shocking, and also verified by other scientific arena of study: the American Southwest (Texas, Arizona and new Mexico) had regular periods of catastrophic drought lasting 100-200 years at intervals of 800-1200 years for the last 100,000 years. Th last episode was 600-800 AD; which was 1400 years ago, which statistically means we are way over due for the next catastrophic drought. So the current drought, in its 6th year is probably the beginning of a very long drought, that has already overwhelmed the extensive reservoir system. Second, the 20th century was a fluke: a century of the mildest, calmest weather in almost a million years. so we wer fooled into thinking the 20th century was "normal"weather, and the mild climate combined improved crop yields provided by hybrid crops and oil based fertilizers and pesticides causes the world population to explode from 3 billion in 1900 to 6.5 billion today. With oil almost exhausted and turbulent rapidly changing weather expected, the most optimistic estimates are that by 2050 we will be able to feed only 3 billion. That's a mind boggling amount of suffering and starvation. And there are solutions at hand. The only viable strategy to mitigate the suffering is population control, which comes at a time when fundamentalist religious groups are opposed to all forms of birth control. A truly suicidal tactic, based on a thinly veiled concern for the "sanctity of life" between religious groups who have no such concerns while slaughtering each other at every opportunity for 2000 years. Hypocrisy at its most disgusting and deadly level, since it may cause the extinction of the species. Without population control we have no realistic chance of survival.
A closer look at the fish in the next photo in my stream. I over-processed this one to reduce the glare.
Only got a couple photos today- this one is an unhappy Mac I was working on. Shot w iPhone 5s, cropped and over processed in Snapseed.
The bright background behind the big stone in the front makes it look like I did a little bit too much of post-processing, but the rim is due to the background and the fog. In times of over-processed pictures I felt like pointing this out.
Hope you like the picture.
a bit of rest after a longer-than-expected car ride to drop "Mom" at work and pick up a repaired lens.
a quite-(possibly over-)processed version here.
Boston, USA
My first photo edited using Aperture! Iām pretty pleased with the way it turned out. I wanted to avoid over processing the photo, however at the same time I quite liked the Lomo effect I got with the colours and contrasting. Let me know what you think :)
This is my first HDR photo from my trip to Niagara Falls in 2009. I like the way it turned out even though its a little over processed. Let me know what you think and thanks for checking it out :)
The magnolia in the backyard is starting to bloom - it looks great. Have to take more photos before the flowers drop! Probably over processed this one but I don't care.....
This is completely over processed... as was, and as currently is (if that makes sense) is my brain... Like I've mentioned before, I have 1,022 photo to edit and go through from my SPain trip... 453 are from my dslr, which will be mostly for the sake of flickr... but I've still got to worry about the others as I have to put them on other sites so that my family can view them... Basically, I was editing in this photo, and thought it would be best suited for what was consuming my thoughts that day ;)
Day .24.
Front bay window, Lockport NY, Dec '08
Watch out.....those needles are Dutch sharp ;)
Sigma 10-20mm f1/4.0-5.6 EX DG
IMGP3171_hdrtm_ll2_bcovdb_bcsc_rdm
For all you ladies who asked, here are the loos, a bit over-processed sadly as the light was so poor, and yes I was the only one there though I cloned myself out - it was early breakfast time on a Tuesday morning so necessarily quiet. Amazing how many people like a pint for breakfast, I was quite surprised!
This is so over processed its nothing like the original Its actually a phot of a welsh flag flying proudly on a boat, cropped, then in Picnik given the neon treatment and a red vignette.
Viewing looking down the Aira Force waterfall in the Lake District. Over-processed to hide the fact that this was a handheld shot with an ND filter in place. My grip was not a steady as I though!
Gone back to my old workflow to see if I can break the habit of over processing! I've been using my portrait action for nearly everything recently.
I am usually not a big fan of over processed HDR's... but for some reason this one really struck me when I ran it. It actually captured a lot of the color that I couldn't get to pop with everything else.
Haircut time! I actually trimmed his hawk after this so it wasn't so out of control. I don't know what this face was about...but there it is, over-processed and all :)
Strobist: Lumopro LP120 shot through Westcott 43" white umbrella high and behind camera right. Fired with Cactus V4
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More overprocessing fun. Check out the larger size for some grain love.
I love the way the walking guy came out in front of the lights.
The classic old barn shot along Mormon Row with the Teton Range in the background. This may be a little over-processed in my attempt to recover some of the mountains in the background. Let me know what you think.
She knows what to do-I mean how to look. I love it! IM still wondering if I over processed a bit on the brightening.
Many of my works - like this one - are produced entirely digitally. I sometimes re-use older works as art elements and also drawing objects - usually rectangles. These are combined together using Serif PagePlus X3.
Next I mesh warp the image and finally photographically over process the image with Paint Shop Pro.