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A completely nondescript, sit by the fire day.

 

Polamatic app, iPhone 11

This is basically two new toys at the same time: The Leica Q shot with a Moment Macro lens for the iPhone 12. I really like the look of the Leica and the Phone allowed for an interesting angle. And I wanted to test the upload via mobile app once more...

Apps: AfterLight, Camera+, PhotoCopier, Snapseed, Retouch

Apps:

Snapseed

Elasticam

Apps used: Slow Shutter Cam, LensLight and Mextures

 

If you like my work and are interested in the back stories, techniques and apps used to create my art on a mobile device, you might like my new mobile artistry course "Adventures in Creative Mobile Artistry." The course includes lots of "live" video footage demonstrating the whole creative process from where to find inspiration in our everyday surroundings to in-depth editing and slow shutter painterly techniques and processes including compositing, layering, blending and masking.

 

TELL ME MORE :

Click on the link or the banner below to find how you can get started right now:

creativemobileartistry.com/launchpromotion?affiliate_id=5...

 

Exploring the night sky with the stargazing app

#StarWalk. #skywatching

#astronomyapp

Have a wonderful Friday and a great weekend all my Flickr friends. HFF

when Ada looked at Luka's lids today she thought they were so beautiful, with the stars and all. she said: it's like we can see what she is dreaming on her lids when she closes her eyes.

 

I think that was such a cool thing to say!

when the day is about to rise and the night to fall, for a split of time both are coexisting

 

Created with RNI Films app. Preset 'Agfa Optima 200 v.3 Faded'

The weather is absolutely miserable. Yesterday I drove past this lake on my way to the store and its parking lot was completely empty. Really unusual sight. I don't have a "before" shot for this one as I took it with an iPhone app which does all the "sliding" without saving the original, but you have to trust me. It's slid. HSS, everyone!

Continuing experiments with the Photoshop Camera app to add some interest to the boring 'nature' in my neighbourhood...

 

On this occasion I'm going for a 'night' look, like when the thin moon crescent is obscured by clouds and very few stars are seen in the sky... You can't see it? It's too dark? Well - this is night time, what did you expect? ;) ))

Apps: Snapseed, iColorama

Apps: Snapseed, Glaze, Superimpose

Peace Bridge, Derry, N Ireland .. 1min exposure using Even Longer app on iPhone 13 pro

Hipstamatic Tintype App

Shot with Fuji X100F

Near Buena Vista, Georgia

***BLOGGER APPS NOW CLOSED - THANK YOU TO EVERYONE WHO APPLIED - SELECTED APPLICANTS WILL BE CONTACTED IN WORLD NO LATER THAN MARCH 16TH***

  

We're looking for a few good bloggers to add to our Juju team. If you're interested and meet the requirements listed below, please click to fill in the application.

 

Blogger Requirements:

 

• Must have been blogging (either on a blog or micro blogging with credits on Flickr) for at least 6 months.

 

• Credits must be full, complete and accurate on blog posts.

 

• High quality pictures are a must.

 

• Must receive a minimum of 500 views per post on Flickr.

 

• Must be able to blog at least 1 Juju item per month.

 

We look forward to reading your applications

 

Good luck!

View to the island of Tromso and also, Ringvassoya, Hakoya, Kvaloysletta and Vengsoya.

Panorama using the inbuilt app on the Sony mirrorless.

Apps: Snapseed, Glaze, Superimpose, Tangent

iPhone shot & app edit. Reminds me of the Group of Seven Canadian artists' style. Thank you for your appreciation, Gail

生活不過是隨走隨拍

-

iPhone 4

App: Hipstamatic

Apps: Hipstamatic, Laminar, Photocopier

Apps: Art Studio, Image Blender, Snapseed, Stackables, Pixelmator, Glitche, PhotoToaster

This is one of my first explorations with the app Pixelmator - an app I quickly learned to love - one that will no doubt appear in many, many of my future works. I began this piece with a selfie I took in the car waiting for my son to come out from school. I explored the various tools, and especially the magical brushes in this app and arrived at this. I recall being at lunch with a friend some years ago - and noticed a table filled with women in red hats and purple attire - they were very enthusiastic and I was fascinated by them. This was pre-iPhone days, or I might have some very interesting photos of that lunch! I later learned of the Red Hat Society, which I suppose I am of age to join now, but I don't think I will!

 

A mirror disruption using the Nception app

.

The morning after Thanksgiving Thursday, I had been googling for how to actually use the Stackables editing app. The interface and mechanism of using is so different from editing apps with which I was familiar.

Yes there are layers, and there is some rudimentary masking. But it was quite different looking from Snapseed which I've been using for a bit on and off.

Google is our friend of course and I found a blog in which the writer calls Stackables his favorite "grunge" app. By that, he means he uses it to add textures and colors in various layers.

This put it in perspective for me.

It's not like Snapseed where one can edit brightness, contrast, detail, etc.

But one can add in separate layers, textures and effects, and change blend modes from Normal to Overlay to Soft Light, basically all the blend modes one would see in Photoshop.

 

Getting a BFP (Big Freakin Phone), the iPhone 7 Plus, gives more screen real estate to see what one is doing. I don't have an iPad which would probably make more sense when using these apps.

 

This image started out being shot mid afternoon with the iphone, to catch the slanting light and barred shadows falling across the window and lamp (one of my favorite things in our house). This original image can be seen in the first comment box below.

The iphone's native aspect ration is 4:3 (I know, really?)

 

The image was opened in Snapseed and cropped to 3:2 which to my eye, suited the subject better. Because I would be adding "grunge," I figured I'd better make the image have less contrast. And Snapseed has great tools with which to accomplish this.

 

Each time I made changes, I'd export the altered image back to the iphone's gallery/albums. I'll talk about this more later.

 

Also in the first comment box below is the altered image from Snapseed that I imported into Stackables. It's been over a week now since working on this image, and the app was so new to me that I'm afraid I don't remember all the things that were done. Again after a significant change in the image's "look," I exported back to the gallery. Honestly, I do that more now that I've had more experience, but I did do it a few times that first day.

 

After adding various layers of tints and textures and playing with many different blend modes, it got pretty much to what we see here.

 

I've discovered that the AirDrop feature on my iPhone automatically notices my Mac computer. All I need to do is select which images I want to go to the computer, press the Share icon with which even fuddy duddies like me are now familiar, and send them via the AirDrop.

 

If I had been smart enough to save various iterations of travels through Snapseed and Stackables, once in the computer, I can open as many as I want as layers in one Photoshop document, do things with each layer, and mask and slide to my heart's content.

 

See, I told you there would be more later about the benefit of saving separate images as one goes.

But I really learned this after playing with this image.

 

It's been long enough that I couldn't remember what I had done in Ps with this image so opened it again.

It turns out all I had done in Ps was enhance contrast of mid tones using luminosity channels, and masking that effect from the center of the image, and adding a violet tint filter to provide contrast to the warmth of most of the tones, and masking so that only certain areas were influenced.

 

And there we have it. Since this image, I've been exporting from the editing apps after a significant change, so that eventually, quite a few different versions of each image are then imported back to the computer where they might be combined in Ps. This lends the ability to have a texture in one portion of an image, a green tone in another, a blue somewhere else, combining in ways that are more selective than what these phone and tablet apps can easily do.

 

What I think is pretty cool, is that some of these images I'm creating remind me of paintings I'd wanted to create decades ago when I thought I wanted to be an art major.

 

- hss!

Apps: Snapseed, Portrait HD, Repix, Blender, iColorama

Apps:

Tiny Planet

Wood Camera

PhotoToaster

Lush foliage in a hidden corner at the Secret Garden Centre near Newmarket, Co. Cork. Enhanced using the iPhone's painteresque App. Happy Sliders Sunday everyone!

No one said it would be easy to reach redemption...

 

Five Points Park.

Chinatown, New York

 

Taken with a 3Gs iPhone using Hipstamatic app (John S + Float) and processed with CameraBag app.

Apps:

Hipstamatic (Lens: Ray Mark II/ Film: Blanko)

Superimpose: Layering

Mextures: Textures

Filterstorm: retouching

VSCOcam: Filters (se3 preset)

Apps: Snapseed, Impresso, Paint Can, Superimpose

Chapter 4: Shut It Out - When you shut things out, most of it goes away - except for a lingering discomfort ... of betrayal. Who can you trust? Who is fair? Who is kind? Who has empathy? The lack of decorum is disgraceful. You keyboard warriors and trolls; You screen shooters and virtual gossips - Are you this way In Real Life? Or do you skulk away in a corner? Regardless. I shut you out.

 

michellerobinson.photography

facebook.com/michmutters

 

Procamera, Snapseed, Superimpose, Decim8, Stackables App, Filterloop, Camera Awesome

apple iphone 4S. apps: PhotoForge 2, camera bag, alt photo, picfx.

Apps: Snapseed, iColorama

vue de la rive Nord-Ouest (à l'opposé du barrage) en contrebas de la ferme-auberge du Forlet (ancienne marcairie).

 

Voir la notice du ministère de la culture au sujet du barrage

 

N.B.

La dénomination actuelle du lac provient de traductions maladroites comme souvent en Alsace. En effet, son nom d’origine était lac du Foehrlé qui signifie « entouré de petits pins », issu de Föhre, l’arbre, le pin commun. Ce nom qui a été déformé en Forlen, puis Forellen : les truites en allemand. D'où sa double appellation française actuelle.

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