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A view of the opposite bank to our Stena Ferry at the Hoek van Holland, taken from the sun deck at the rear of the ship.

 

I am unsure about this image. When I studied photography a lot of our time was spent discussing photographic truth, and only 50% of this image has anything to do with the truth.

 

The bottom half of this has been manipulated with a displacement map created with Photoshop 6, following the instructions in a Digital Photo Magazine tutorial. Essentially you create the displacement map with a series of noise filters, blur filters, embossing and stretching and tilting the canvas. Then the image to be reflected is copied, turned upside down and flipped, the displacement map is then used to create the ripple effect. The whole effect is possibly the most complex bit of manipulation I have ever done, and to repeat it I would definitely have to follow the instructions once more. Luckily they come as a video lesson on a cd-rom!

 

www.photographymags.co.uk/nav?page=photography.contentspa...

 

So, what do you think? I chose this image as it was at least one that had water in the bottom third, but any image can have this treatment applied to it.

 

See where this picture was taken. [?]

 

Explore! Highest position: 88 on Monday, October 1, 2007

  

Ibiza Recovered coming soon.

I was playing about on photoshop today at college and I learnt how to do displacement mapping. It's actually really simple to do and you can get some awesome results too! :D

Golden Crackle Paste over Golden Black Gesso over Ampersand Hardbord

Not much of a shot really, more of an experiment. I had a nice shot of some surface ripples on a pond, but the water was black and there was nothing visible below the ripples. So I used the shot as a displacement map and applied it to a shot of a chess set in Photoshop to see if I could make it appear as if it were underwater. Didn't work as well as I had hoped, but thought I'd post it anyway.

Crackle N rescan - only 3 days later - deeper cracks

 

Golden Crackle Paste over Golden Black Gesso over Ampersand Hardbord

Golden Crackle Paste over Golden Black Gesso over Ampersand Hardbord

Crackle textures G, H, I, J, and K were made with DecoArt Texture Crackle. I'm pretty disappointed with the performance I was able to get out of it. In many places, it barely cracked at all. The edges fared best.

 

I scanned these 5 textures anyway. Since the centers are relatively undistorted, these crackle textures will probably work best as picture frames.

The village of Kalchreuth near Nuremberg. A pic back from 2008. Why I revisited it? In the October Issue of "Digital SLR photography" I stumbled on a workshop in which you can create a fake water surface by mirroring a copy of the original shot and using a displacement map. Looking for a picture similar to the one in the tutorial I remembered this shot and I tried to flood the scenery. Cool effect. Easy to do. A fake lake.

 

Check out other pictures from my Franken set: Franken

 

Image Details:

-Nikon D80 with AF-S DX VR Zoom-NIKKOR 18-200mm 1:3,5-5,6G IF-ED

-Exposure 1/250 sec at f/16, ISO 320 and 155mm focal length

-Postprocessing: Lightroom 2.7, Photoshop CS4

 

My images are all copyrighted © All rights reserved. No usage allowed in any form without my written consent.

Crackle Paint Texture

Crackle textures G, H, I, J, and K were made with DecoArt Texture Crackle. I'm pretty disappointed with the performance I was able to get out of it. In many places, it barely cracked at all. The edges fared best.

 

I scanned these 5 textures anyway. Since the centers are relatively undistorted, these crackle textures will probably work best as picture frames.

Crackle textures G, H, I, J, and K were made with DecoArt Texture Crackle. I'm pretty disappointed with the performance I was able to get out of it. In many places, it barely cracked at all. The edges fared best.

 

I scanned these 5 textures anyway. Since the centers are relatively undistorted, these crackle textures will probably work best as picture frames.

Crackle L rescan - only 3 days later - deeper cracks

 

Golden Crackle Paste over Golden Black Gesso over Ampersand Hardbord

This one was originally pretty much a failure. I scanned it anyway. It's Crackle O.

 

I slapped some more Golden Crackle Paste right on top of it and tried again.

 

The repainted rescan is this image, Crackle P

This one was pretty much a failure. I scanned it anyway. You never know...

 

I think I'll slap some more Golden Crackle Paste right on top of it and try again.

---

The repainted rescan is Crackle P immediately following this one.

I added a coat of brown acrylic paint, intending to crackle it again. I'm not that crazy about how the Jo Sonja Crackle Medium becomes a shiny cracked shellac, rather than cracking the paint, so I may cover these boards with more crackle paste and continue, or I may sand the paint partially off.

 

The paint made the cracks into dotted lines, which doesn't look so hot.

I added a coat of brown acrylic paint, intending to crackle it again. I'm not that crazy about how the Jo Sonja Crackle Medium becomes a shiny cracked shellac, rather than cracking the paint, so I may cover these boards with more crackle paste and continue, or I may sand the paint partially off.

 

The paint made the cracks into dotted lines, which doesn't look so hot.

You can use a Displacement Map to distort an image to fir to the contours of another image. The tutorial is here : photoshopper27.blogspot.com/2010/10/displacement-map-in-p...

Crackle textures G, H, I, J, and K were made with DecoArt Texture Crackle. I'm pretty disappointed with the performance I was able to get out of it. In many places, it barely cracked at all. The edges fared best.

 

I scanned these 5 textures anyway. Since the centers are relatively undistorted, these crackle textures will probably work best as picture frames.

Crackle M rescan - only 3 days later - deeper cracks

 

Golden Crackle Paste over Golden Black Gesso over Ampersand Hardbord

Golden Crackle Paste over Golden Black Gesso over Ampersand Hardbord

I added a coat of brown acrylic paint, intending to crackle it again. I'm not that crazy about how the Jo Sonja Crackle Medium becomes a shiny cracked shellac, rather than cracking the paint, so I may cover these boards with more crackle paste and continue, or I may sand the paint partially off.

 

The paint made the cracks into dotted lines, which doesn't look so hot.

This was an ho-hum photo of a cavity in a Sakura tree in High Park. Nice edges and colours but . . .So I added a displacement map with jumble tiles after adjusting levels and increasing vibrancy a tad.

I added a coat of brown acrylic paint, intending to crackle it again. I'm not that crazy about how the Jo Sonja Crackle Medium becomes a shiny cracked shellac, rather than cracking the paint, so I may cover these boards with more crackle paste and continue, or I may sand the paint partially off.

 

The paint made the cracks into dotted lines, which doesn't look so hot.

Golden Black Gesso over Joo Sonja Crackle Medium over acrylic paint on an Ampersand Hardbord

Part of the 'throw away' society series.

 

This image was made with photoshop from a shot of creased paper and a shot of trees combined.

 

The tree shot has been distorted to follow the contours of the paper.

The Canada Malting Silos at the foot of Bathurst in Toronto has somehow avoided the wrecking ball and remains standing, a prominent architectural herald of old Toronto. Nice to see Toronto history stay standing, resisting the destroyers and demolishers. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada_Malting_Silos

From a tutorial by Bill Labus on tutsplus.com, after Alberto Seveso.

©peter mackey 2012

Not a political statement, simply a Photoshop displacement map exercise based on current Americam politics.

Anyone offended I will take it down.

 

Experiments in wrapping a texture around an object. She is one hot bride.

3 buildings and plants rendered in 3D separately. Composed and final touches in Photoshop. Check out my blog to see more projects www.theartof365.com

 

After I completed and posted this I realized it looks a little like another piece I did 3 years ago. This time I didn't use any tutorials, just went with it.

Don't you think?

www.flickr.com/photos/26210918@N03/2512263377/in/set-7215...

 

Getting into the Olympic Spirit!

 

Inspired by an article in one of photomags I read. Was waiting outside my shop to take some photos of the local Silver Band and I snapped a few shots of my car then went home & played around in PSE & came up with this. It's a bit rough round the edges but still think it's worth it.

 

From a 1984 trip (see set for all the pix; text from album of trip): The Illuminations: 10:00 pm & all of Paris is lit up -- Notre Dame, Seine, Louvre, Eiffel Tower, Palais de Chaillot [from which this shot of the Tower was taken], Place du Trocadero, Av Des Champs Elysees, Obelisque, Place de la Concorde, Arc de Triomphe. We stopped at the Palais de Chaillot -- the view of the Eiffel Tower is breathtaking.

I'm sure everyone knows where this tut come from. How do you think mine turned out?

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