View allAll Photos Tagged Processing

The quick process (it took way longer to type this than to do it) of how I got Roxy to obey me. It really helped to start with a strong image that was quite symmetrical.

 

1. Select and copy and paste onto a new layer the left 1/2 of the photo because of the clarity of her eye and the absence of stray hairs. This ended up being easier than using the healing brush to remove the hairs and trying to manually fix her blurry left eye.

2. Flip the copied image and place it over top of the opposite side.

3a. On the copied layer, start erasing with a bit of a feather to the brush areas so that the original lighting remains as much of the original image remains to not look copied.

3b. Erase the copied eye and use the reflection from the original left eye.

3c. Retain the original nose, mouth, and Roxy's famous nose part.

4. Clone a bit of the fur on her shoulder to create a look slightly different than the opposite side.

5. use the Dodge tool to brighten up the whites of her eyes.

 

Flatten the image, resize it, and do a quick Curve adjustment to brighten it a bit and add a touch of contrast (I have no idea how to describe that properly).

 

It ends up being like one of those comparison cartoons that you have to figure out what's different but in this case what's different from side to side and what's the same.

 

The original picture was shot with a Canon Rebel XT and a Canon 70-200mm f/4L IS lens (I'll be ranting about this lens for some time to come).

The camera was set to 1600 ISO to allow for the poor lighting at the daycare, 1/80 sec shutter @ f/4 with the image stabilizing on which wasn't fast enough to avoid blur in the original image but did allow the detail in her fur to come out.

A manual white balance was done by shooting a white piece of paper taped to a pillar in the middle of the room (remind me to take it down).

Heavily processed picture of a flower outside of a very nice restaurant in Folsom, California.

Thought it would be fun to post up the processed versions of my 2 entry's for the photo technique challenge.

  

View On Black

阿發不小心把我這捲過期五年的Konica SRM當負片用C41沖了 XD

 

讓不玩LOMO的我意外第一次嘗試了E2C Cross Processing

Central City Graveyards, Colorado

Heavily processed Library of Congress ukiyo-e print (more of a sketch) of a dancing man and puppy or kitten (it's hard to tell) at his feet, also dancing.

Stills from audioresponsive app in Processing for a live "flute with electroacoustic voice" performance. The composition, "Cimmerian Isolation", composed by Nathaniel Haering, will be performed by flautist Jaume Darbra Fa in Europe early in 2019.

Still from a video /program. Slight modification from this tutorial : vimeo.com/23045361

Heavily processed picture of a flower outside of a very nice restaurant in Folsom, California.

I had taken some pictures and took them in for developing but they were cross processed by accident. These results were better than if the developer had done things right. A happy accident indeed!

Post Processing a bland photograph into a high impact , high contrasted image with lots of texture. self portrait taken just to work on this technique of post work.

some vertex arrays with texture. Sound Reactive

This soap is colored with Moroccan Red Clay and fragranced with Red Clover Tea. Saponified Olive, Coconut and Avocado Oils. My 1st swirl attempt with Hot Process.

 

I am becoming quite enamoured with Crock Pot Hot Process and attempting to make a batch a day when possible.

Biodiesel processor and wash tank

8192 triangles are drawn in 3 dimensional space and used to approximate a source image. An algorithm refines the colors and positions of the vertices until the image converges on the target.

    

Made with Processing (processing.org)

One of my favorite scents. Reminds me of our vacation in Maui.

Processions, semaine de Paques, Quetzaltenango

Heavily processed picture of a dandelion in front of our house in Yubari.

Cold process soap.

Processed with VSCO with m5 preset

This may drive purists up the wall. Apologies beforehand.

 

I've recently learned about the language processing, where you can write your own visual scripts. Fairly cool stuff. This is a "filter" that basically takes an image and creates a "Chuck Close" version of it using circles and squares.

 

Nothing cooler than writing your own software to manipulate an image. Kind of like artistic hacking.

Copyright Ben Phillips Photography Ltd, +447785 721740, www.bphillips.co.uk

The process of work for music album's cover

The tagline was used by an actual dairy somewhere. I just added the banner and the cow's 'stache. It all seemed to fit in the zeitgeist of that time. 'Greater production for the glorification of the Reagan Youth' and all that sort of thing.

This is an experimental peice. It is the head of a nail shot using an extreme specialty macro lens (very difficult lens for me to use). The image was then processed in photoshop to give it the lighting effects.

Flowers and Lines created with Processing. They try to be weird and obviously kitsch at the same time, recycling the idea of crusty old blood and urin in fabrics.

My 1st custom middie. Little process :)

 

1 2 ••• 74 75 77 79 80