View allAll Photos Tagged OVER-PROCESSED
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.
my friend Andrea founded the Bipolar Babe Society, and on Thursday evenng hosted the 3rd Annual Bipolar Babe Benefit Gala to raise awareness and money to continue to make a difference in Victoria and accross BC. She is a hero of mine!
She is the Bipolar Babe and she is stomping out stigma!!!
HCS
Happy Cliche Saturday!
How cliche! over processing a photo of a fine friend!
This hero deserves a portrait photog to show her goddess beingness!
Kitten couchant upon a, er, couch. Yeah. I spent way too long on this for what I did. Can you say over processed? Still, I like it.
Queen: All alone, my pet?
Snow White: Why... why, yes, I am, but...
Queen: The... the little men are not here?
Snow White: No, they're not, but...
Queen: [Sniffing] Mm-hmm. Baking pies?
Snow White: Yes, gooseberry pie.
Queen: It's apple pies that make the menfolks' mouths water. Pies made from apples like these.
Snow White: Oh, they do look delicious.
Queen: Yes, but wait 'till you taste one, dearie. Like to try one? Go on. Go on, have a bite.
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.
For the Storrington Camera club weekly alphabet challenge - R is for ........ Reflections.
A bit of a busy image with probably too many reflections. Thoughts on the (over?) processing welcome.
Industrial end of denver.
HDR from 3 handheld exposures, way over processed, but i couldn't help myself.
For class with dave..."unnatural color". After trying a few photos that had vibrant colors to begin with, I realized I didn't like the garish effect of using the "wrong" color balance. Today I was out and while the lighting was very bland, I really found the clouds and lines interesting. In Lightroom I set the white balance to "fluorescent" and fiddled with levels, contrast, etc. Over processed I'm sure, but I guess that's the point?
"Is that really you, Nick Cage?" Outside Madame Tussands Wax Museum. Candid shot, no ID on the woman. This is over-processed; the camera and the photographer were not totally cooperating at this moment.
I KNOW, this is sooo over processed it's not even funny.lol I tried to do something about that horrible light from the camera flash, but failed terribly. Anyway this is all I've got for my 365 project for today.
Find me on Facebook
003/365
I can settle down and be doin’ just fine
Til I hear an old train rollin’ down the line
Then I hurry straight home and pack
And if I didn’t go, I believe I’d blow my stack
I love you baby, but you gotta understand
When the lord made me
He made a ramblin’ man.
© Hank Williams Sr.
Sadly, like much of Britain, numerous dairy farms on the Island have ceased to exsist. Most of the supermarkets do not take Island produced milk, so one group of farmers has come up with the idea of this small self-service shop at the farm gate. The milk is delicious as it is not over-processed like the supermarket milk.
Okay, I promise I'm over processing the pics from this series. :)
4/52: 9/20/10: (Attempt 1) When the tides of life turn against you and the current upsets your boat, don't waste those tears on what might have been, just lie on your back and float. - Author Unknown
Apparently, I don't hae DSS figured out after all. Just realized I got a really bad alignment issue there. I kept trying to figure why it didn't looke right.
Stack test of NGC 7000. Four images ran through DSS and then over processed in Photoshop CS3. Just playing around. DSS definetely brings out more detail but I still need to play around with some more. Images captured with a Canon 60Da and a Canon 200mm f/2.8 L piggy backed on a Meade LX90 w/wedge and a fried motor drive board. Images shot at ISO 6400 for around 30 secs each.
irish lights vessel, Granuaile. At deep water quay Cobh, Co Cork. I probably over processed this image but the sky was blown out in the original and i wasn't happy with it.
The fall of my sophomore year of college I became engrossed in the magical world of photography here on Flickr. I asked my dad for a Canon Rebel XTi that winter for Christmas. At the time it seemed like a hobby, maybe even a gamble. I didn't know how long this was going to last. I had ADD..no..not real ADD but I can't stick with any one project or hobby for very long...at all. But I had it, I had in my hands a brand new camera. I began taking photos of anything and everything. I spent hours learning to edit and finding my inspiration. I went through awful awful phases of over processing and under processing and adding textures and having awful focus. It was all a part of learning and growing my hobby further. And for fun I began adding my photos on facebook and friends began commenting and asking me to take their photos. I had no clue what I was doing with the portrait world. All I had used my camera for was taking photos of flowers or ridiculous self-expressionistic photos of myself. But I decided, why not? So I began focusing my energy toward portrait photography and learning about it. After years of lame shoots with friends and failed attempts at being like those I admired I hung my camera up and said goodbye to photography for almost a year. It was time to focus on being a big girl now. Finish college. Find a job. You're never going to be a professional photographer. Then...I got an internship.
I sat at a desk day after day and everything I did was monitored by someone else. I was told when to come in, when to leave. I was told when to be at a meeting and when to skip it. I had this long for lunch and I had to wear this. I remember jotting down on scratch paper one day while at work "Begin photography business ASAP. Must not do this for the rest of life". Right then and there I promised myself to try...really really try...at being a portrait and wedding photographer. I finished up my last semester at college, came home, picked up my camera and began shooting. I set up my own website and am now making money doing portrait work and am set up to second shoot some weddings this summer to build my portfolio. I am so proud of myself. But I can't help but be a little reminiscent. This photo is my last photo I will be doing any portrait or wedding photography with my Rebel XTi. I had it for 3.5 years. Its been through everything with me. Literally. Crying. Fights. Happiness. Boyfriends. Laughing until my stomach hurt from doing ridiculous photo concepts with my friend. Graduation photos. Little brother's basketball games.....everything. And now I say goodbye and I tuck it away and take on my first real professional camera, the Canon 5D Mark ii. I feel like this takes me into my next phase of my career. Time to be serious. And I have Flickr to thank for it. As I look back in my contacts and see names that have been around since the beginning, I can't help but smile because so many of them have taken the same path as me. Something that started out as just a hobby, has turned into something we want to do for the rest of our lives.
There are so few things in my life I am 100% sure of. I am sure my family will always have my back and that they will always be in my life. I am sure that bagels with extra cream cheese will never stop being delicious. And I am sure that I will be successful with my business and come 2013 I will be booked with weddings and portrait sessions all summer long. I am so happy that photography could provide me with the rare opportunity to be so sure about something in my life.
I don't mean to shove it in your face that
I have opposable thumbs, Osc, but
you can't be sour about it.
Adapted from Grandma! Lard produces one of the most tender and flakiest crusts out there, but the key (thanks WCA) is to buy a good quality, not over-processed or hydrogenated brand (i.e. Tenderflake) to avoid any “off” aftertaste.
Grandma swore by her pie crust for years until Crisco took over the supermarket (sad since lard is actually cheaper and healthier than butter, containing less saturated fat, more monounsaturated fat and has no additives or impurities, like non-organic butter has (i.e. colour, antibiotics and hormones in cow feed) – this is simply her formula updated for the 21st century.
Recipe: yummysmells.blogspot.com/2011/10/thanks-for-memories.html
i wish i had had my nikon when i took this, because its a sweet shot, but my finepix couldnt cut it really. still, it's pretty.
Explored. Highest position: 372 on Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Subtle HDR. I don't care too much for the over-processed, absurdly-tone-mapped images.
This was my first photo where I practiced processing eyes selectively. Turned out great, but it's obviously over processed. It's a general rule of thumb for me to way over do something the first time. I always seem to gravitate towards dramatic processing, but I like to keep and look at photos like these so I know what not to do in the future.
Strobist:
Red Gelled nude flash for background light
Blue gelled nude flash behind subject facing the camera for blue rim.
Boomed Softbox right above her face pointing down
Reflector umbrella camera right.
An experiment in over-processing. I wanted to put something up that was taken today but when your background is a fog-bank, it’s worth playing with the fore and middle ground!!
Took me a while to edit this picture... I never really liked the results until I realized I was over processing it. Then I liked it.
What do you think? Constructive criticism welcome!
"The only reason for being a bee is to make honey. And the only reason for making honey is so I can eat it"
- Winnie The Pooh
Just a fleeting glimpse of the spectacular clouds that have been around this week, it’s a bit over processed sorry!
Photo has not been altered in any way, I am not a big fan of over-processing so most of my uploads are straight from the camera or SOOC!
Clouds obscuring my view of the Eclipse. A bit over processed. i started by trying to recreate what i was seeing through my polarized sunglasses... and then just started having fun.
Late, setting afternoon sunlight from the right, gold-silver reflector in the left. Edited in LR 4 and Silver Efex Pro 2.
I find it a bit difficult to edit portraits in B&W. They easily look either flat and uninteresting or the face starts to look "dirty", in some way over-processed and unnatural. Landscapes are so much easier, they forgive so much and you can be much more creative...
How to achieve character but still be somehow natural. This might be too dark, or something is not really ready yet. I wanted it to be quite strong. This is my second version of it already. Hmm. Tips and critique are welcome.
Whatever I touch, turns to snow in my clutch. I'm too much!
52 week self-portrait project (3/52)
♫ ♪ ~~ Tune from a Year Without Santa Claus - “Snow Miser Song” ~~ ♪♫ (don’t worry mate…opens in new window…click it!)
Note: Had to un-tweak a little after seeing how washed out the previous thumbnail was... this is what happens when you start screwing with the sliders!