View allAll Photos Tagged compositing

Another example of portraiture without skill or equipment, through the magic of photoshop. The four images on the left were combined with a variety of layer masks, level adjustments, and clone brushing to produce the composite image on the right that we sent out with our Christmas cards this year.

 

I second-guessed my zoom settings in the middle of shooting, and then the best smiles ended up in the wrong batch, so I had to do some resizing to make things match up. The flash-lit kids don't quite blend right with the mostly non-flash background, but it works pretty well if you don't stare at it too long.

 

[See also final result]

 

[P-20051219-213307-mod-demo]

A new chopper gun, which applies fiberglass quickly to large areas, is tested before it's put to work

Composite of 9 Shots - Memorial Day Weekend - 5/29/2011

-Two SB900 @ 1/2 power each inside the Lumiquest LTP softbox fired by cybersync

-Nikon 85mm f/1.4 @ f/16

-ISO 100

 

Shot taken during day time at around 4:00pm

This is at Hackettstown NJ at my sister's house

(centimeter scale)

 

This rock is from a gravel bar along a creek at Chatham, Ohio. It was eroded from local or near-local Mississippian-aged bedrock - probably from the Logan Formation (Osagean Stage, upper Lower Mississippian).

 

The sample is composed of over a dozen small to medium-sized, subspherical ironstone nodules (= iron oxide rock). They have become cemented together by a crust of the same iron oxide material.

 

This material could also be called mammillary ironstone.

 

Provenance: modern fluvial clast derived from Pleistocene glacial drift

 

Locality: gravel bar on the western side of the town of Chatham, northern Licking County, east-central Ohio, USA

 

Shot separately then composite together.

Composite made from 4 images of Philadelphians walking in front of mirror, 20th&Chestnut, Philadelphia, PA, manipulated

 

Original photos from this minitaure transient public installation.

 

I find it interesting that this composite of 5 random Philadelphians ends up looking like a dissheveled, unkept bearded man muttering to himself as he lights a cigarette.

 

Which given another year without a Super Bowl championship, the pathetic state of the Flyers and Sixers, and a Phillies team with a woeful lack of quality relief pitching...

 

...kind of makes sense ;-)

 

The detail work on these kayak plugs is extremely important. If the plug is misshaped the the kayak will be deformed.

Friday, Chad and Jeff attended an advanced composite fabrication workshop at the Kreysler & Associates manufacturing facility near Vallejo, California. The day started with a broad overview of composite technology and its applications for architecture. Attendees were then taken on a tour of the facility and watched demonstrations of carbon fiber being infused with resin by vacuum and closed-mold methods. At the time of the tour, the facility was being used to produce the cladding for SFMOMA (San Francisco Museum of Modern Art)’s new expansion, designed by Snøhetta, and participants witnessed each stage of the fabrication process for the unique panel system. We are excited by the possibilities and potential uses of this strong and lightweight material because is stronger and lighter than steel and comes in any color, texture, shape, or size.

Students paint the inside of the composite dinghy which will be completed within the next few weeks

was supposed to be working...

First try at Joel Grimes' compositing style.

Composites personal projects

CTG designs and manufactures bespoke propshafts and driveshafts for each client and vehicle. A propshaft is a critical drivetrain transmission component found connecting many multi-drive or rear wheel drivetrain vehicles – they primarily transmit torque and rotate at high speeds.

 

Carbon fibre composites are an ideal material as they offer high torsional strengths but yet a high stiffness/weight ratio. This results in low weight and inertia with improved drivetrain performance to enable longer shafts to run at higher speeds; subsequently reducing the number of piece parts required.

 

model:Berta Devant

 

College work about fashion and models.

photo by:Sandra Mateo

edited by:me

This is a composite of 10 images showing Sunset Lake as it looks today, 9-10-2011.

 

This is a "rough draft" of the project, just to see if it is worth persuing with more images.

 

Hit the magnifying glass (above to the right) to view a little larger with black borders.

A student polishes a kayak deck mold before infusing it with resin.

Friday, Chad and Jeff attended an advanced composite fabrication workshop at the Kreysler & Associates manufacturing facility near Vallejo, California. The day started with a broad overview of composite technology and its applications for architecture. Attendees were then taken on a tour of the facility and watched demonstrations of carbon fiber being infused with resin by vacuum and closed-mold methods. At the time of the tour, the facility was being used to produce the cladding for SFMOMA (San Francisco Museum of Modern Art)’s new expansion, designed by Snøhetta, and participants witnessed each stage of the fabrication process for the unique panel system. We are excited by the possibilities and potential uses of this strong and lightweight material because is stronger and lighter than steel and comes in any color, texture, shape, or size.

Composite of images of Salisbury Cathedral: the altar, a set of stained-glass windows, and an archway over one of the entrances.

Composite photo of musician Zack Baker.

Composites materials are used in our Systems class as students learn how to repair laminate.

A Classic Green Door Stop​ Composite Door With Zinc Art Elegance Glass. Installed In Eastwood, Nottingham. Telephone 01158 660066. Visit Our Website thenottinghamwindowcompany.co.uk Or Pop Into Our West Bridgford Showroom..

This shot is several shots (of a painting which is painted on). Sometimes you have the lens, sometimes you have the skill.

Composite image. Brightness from the normal picture. Color from the UV/IR difference.

 

I'm not sure if the colors can be said to have come from one kind of light but I'm sure most of this is caused by invisible light. Infrared and a little bit of UV. At least UV-A

 

Lens was a Tokina 100mm Macro stopped down to Æ’/16

Trying my hand at a composite. All shoes are images from the shoot. Not fakes. Not sure about the background, but glad to finally get out and try something different.

Composite image of Chinese artifacts.

1 2 ••• 57 58 60 62 63 ••• 79 80