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© Angel Ortega, angelferd
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For authorized purposes only (by the author)
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...this is an experiment with the gradient tool in photoshop...
Choose your second gradient and dab that on with a makeup sponge. I made the gradient go sideways instead of longways this time. Does that make sense?
North Dale, at the point where the northbound gradient eases from 1 in 97 to 1 in 264. LNER A4 Pacific 4-6-2 60007 'Sir Nigel Gresley' heads the 1200 Pickering-Whitby working on the sixth day of the North Yorkshire Moors Railway's ten-day steam gala to celebrate 175 years of the line between Whitby and Pickering.
A while ago, I added the capability to create arbitrary color gradients to my cell phone camera app I'm writing. (I did this for the color map filter I wrote.) One of the features I added to the gradient manager was the ability to save gradients as files. And so, here is a hue gradient (which ranges from 0° on the left to 360° on the right, in the HSB colorspace).
Round, 360° variant (with, unfortunately, red (at 0°) at the bottom).
This shot was taken with the Canon, and I took the same shot in with the Holga, which can be seen here:
Taken for weekly photochallenge... using a gradient map adjustment layer for toning (colour). Some interesting effects; but not wholly convinced I'll be using it a lot. Still, useful tool to have available!
i want see what i could do with gmic starting from a little render of a simple gradient
and i got almost lost i could do much more then i hoped and i love some of them almost as selfstanding images
This is one of the many Up-gradients that the 8416 negotiated en-route from Cuttack to Kendujhargarh.
Parthajit Dasgupta
Vetorização com Gradient Mesh, do Tails, feito no Illustrator.
Miles "Tails" Prower is a trademark of SEGA, all rights reserved.
Adobe Illustrator CS2.
As the natural light pours in from above, the gradation of light is expressed in the textured concrete wall surface as it penetrates further into the space. This sculptural window condition occurs within the christian pilgrimage site, Notre Dame du Haut designed by architect Le Corbusier. This photograph is #2 in the series of 3.
Photograph was taken in Ronchamp, France.
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8x8 inch photograph printed on archival premium photo paper. The standard archival value is 100 years in home display and 200 years in dark storage. This photograph is proportioned and enhanced to capture the specific qualities of the scene. The delivered photograph will not be presented with a watermark.
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