View allAll Photos Tagged gradientmap
Edited elevation map from LRO data colored by me with a gradient map to make it look, uh, festering. The resolution is 100m/pixel.
The colors here are not meant to represent elevation although the color selected for any given pixel was determined by the elevation. (In other words, the colors here are not necessarily representative of the real world.)
I wanted to create something very colourful from a simple shape and see what the result suggested to me ... An abstract game of I-spy if you like. This reminds me of a Smiley with red lips
At the bottom of this wall, the damp is getting in, which is a coincidence, as at the top of this head, the damp is also getting in, so, I am, therefore, digging French ditches and re-rendering them both. Just not at the same time.
A re-edited Walking Dead promo photo featuring Tyreese, incorporating a graphic novel effect.
Created in Photoshop using a gradient map and various filters.
Tyreese photo: www.flickr.com/photos/92390205@N06/
Panorama of LRO elevation maps for the mid-latitudes of the Moon's southern hemisphere. (The image has been reduced significantly in size due to not having fast-enough bandwidth for uploading.) I converted the image to color with a lurid gradient map. (No reason other than I wanted to see what it looked like.) The Moon's equator is the outer circumference and the south pole is in the middle of the dark circle in the center of the image.
Hola a tod@s! He modificado mediante un mapa de degradados (con el fin de hacer mas visibles las diferencias) esta secuencia de imagenes tomadas por el SOHO en el espectro ultravioleta extremo (EIT), se muestran eyecciones de masa coronal a una temperatura aproximada de 1 millón de grados kelvin...
Esto fué a lo largo del anterior ciclo (el numero 23 desde 1755) que duró 12,6 años del 1996 al 200...8. Mas o menos a medio ciclo, año 2000 durante el pico de máxima actividad solar del mismo.
Los ciclos solares duran una media 11 años, empiezan con un minimo de puntos o zonas localizadas de actividad solar (sunspots), se van incrementando y a medio camino alcanzan su máximo para volver a menguar hasta el minimo al final del ciclo. Entre otras muchas curiosidades, tenemos el hecho de que al terminar un ciclo, al minimo, casi de forma inmediata empieza a incrementarse el numero de caracteristicas activas del Sol. Como si respirase.
Ahora llevamos casi 3 años en el ciclo numero 24, que deberia alcanzar su máximo en el 2013 y culminar de nuevo en otro minimo, y eso ya se verá, o no ;) en 2019. Este ciclo que vivimos es el de minima actividad solar en general desde 1823, aunque segun modelos de predicción de momento demostrados en cierta medida, será relativamente activo por lo que a tormentas geomagnéticas y destellos solares se refiere. En agosto de 2010 hubo cuatro eyecciones de masa coronal brutales pero entre Febrero y Marzo de este año se produjo una de tipo X, (coincidiendo con el terremoto de Japón, consecuencia geomagnética directa ??? que cada un@ lo decida por si mismo) la mayor en el ultimo siglo.
Pero el pasado dia 6 de Septiembre, se produjeron dos eyecciones, la segunda de magnitud X2.1, superando la de febrero... de forma excepcional, estas tres ultimas tormentas solares se han producido mirando hacia la tierra, casi desde el centro del sol. Habreis leido o oido acerca de recientes avistamientos de auroras boreales sorprendentemente alejadas de los puntos débiles de la magnetosfera, (ésta "protege" la tierra de la gran mayoria de emisiones del sol), los polos de la tierra. Las auroras son "escapes" de radiación ionizante que se cuelan por los polos, a mayor actividad la "inundación" crece.
No se sabe si las consecuencias serán perceptibles o no, pero desde ayer (dia 11 de sept.) estamos a la espera de otra tremenda tormenta, coincidiendo con el tránsito del cometa Elenin.
Victor Calvis i Ponton
Past and present T189er's weekly alphabet challenge. Week 39. T is for toning with the gradient map. Colours used 'brown, tan and beige'.
Part of the cloisters in Senanque Abbey in Provence. I liked the light and shadow in this shot. Again - taken in the correct week but only uploaded now I have internet access again.
Top left is the original.
Top right is a "clean edit" version.
Bottom left is a version using the "Sprightly B&W" action from Pure Photoshop Actions. I then applied the "ES Vintage 33" gradient map from Elvensword's gradient map pack for the bottom right version.
See the individual photos in my photostream for full details and links.
I'm just wondering what to do next really since I'll have to go out in about half an hour and that's not quite enough time to tidy this room up notwithstanding the fact that you could mostly just shovel it all into a bin bag labelled 'things I don't know what to do with' and stick it in the loft only to discover it again a few years later and say to yourself you always wondered where you'd put the bag of banana chips that you superglued together while you were waiting for the pacific time clock to catch up which it never does until the battery runs out which it did.
c.15:45, Tuesday 5th April 2011 ·
Eastbourne bandstand, East Sussex, England ·
Pentax LX 35mm SLR camera ·
Kodak Portra 160NC colour negative film (ISO 160) ·
Pentax A f2.8 24mm lens? · f5.6|8? · 1/30? ·
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Recolured photo Best wiev to large
Little while ago I relaise how I can use PhotoShop's gradientmap to recolouring photos greative way (Photoshop: Image/Adjust/gradient map).
The image that I have is tilted right
and grainy. Still, it serves to demonstrate
the majesty of Bolshoi Ten - a site
inherited from who knows whom - the late
Commander Keel had made our rocket base.
The locals were an ancient race, and gone
before we ever found this planet. Space
was still a mystery to humans on
the day the last of them here died. Its walls
jut out above a maze of chasms near
a mile - a sheer drop - down. As twilight falls,
the valleys fill with mist and disappear...
The scene is all in azure, indigo
and purple hues in iridescent glow...
When there, you can't help slipping back the ten
or twelve millennia and seeing through
the eyes of those who raised this place. And when
you do, a strange thing happens... Nothing you
admit to, mind you. Yet I venture here
to do just that: I somehow, through a crack
between the worlds, will often see and hear
as though I were a builder, lying back
inside a viewing capsule - sphere of glass
encased in purple arcs that thrust secure
and agile arms beyond the precipice,
out over the abyss. It holds a strange allure...
It's there that in my mind I sense as those
so long ago once did, as twilight grows...
I understand that Bolshoi stations Ten
through Seventeen are being closed for lack
of funding. How'd Commander Keel defend
the need for Bolshoi Ten before...? (That's back
when I arrived, a green cadet...) "We've yet
to learn the secrets of this place - and there
are secrets here to learn." But we're in debt,
and legislators have no funds to spare,
this time, for secrets. We're a rocket base,
and all they see is that our overhead
outweighs our usefulness. Out here in space,
supplies are tenuous. We stay... we're dead...
I float, a face inside a sphere of glass,
the twilight-hued abyss beyond my grasp...
© Keith Ward 2007
The narrator of this story has indicated where you can view his face in the image, there in the observation capsule...
Click here for more about this image and this series, SF Sonnets.
The image is based on the same photo as this one, except it's turned 180 degrees and uses different gradient map settings.
A nishin goten was a dormitory/place of work for large numbers of herring fishermen and processors as well as the owners. 150 men worked, then slept on the 1st floor. A smaller separate room was upstairs via a retractable ladder for the few women that worked there. The owners lived in most of the second story. The herring were overfished by the 1920s to the point that they couldn't recover and the economy based on herring quickly collapsed.
24 May 2007 - This old herring house didn't make the transition into the modern era as a museum or as a souvenir shop/restaurant so it sits in Shukutsu rotting away.
Update: 23 May 2010 - this is now undergoing a complete restoration. Tourism saves history.
2012: The guy who restored it shows it off as a museum and rents it out for catered parties.
The original image didn't show the details of the wood well enough so I used a sepia gradient layer making the darker areas light. I then added blue from the original image sky back into the gradient-mapped photo.
A gradient map image of a fairie wing in one of my photos from the 2008 Fairie Festival in Glen Rock PA.. I love the 3D effect of the red and blue contrast.
Take a look at the image in the large or the original size view, if you like.
Here's a look at the photo I made this from - the teen's wing.
My 5 year old son at the Sands of St Cyrus near Montrose in Scotland.
I have just discovered Elvensword's gradient map pack that includes "ES Vintage 33" used above - elvensword.deviantart.com/gallery/#/d1e4dg2. Love it.
The gradient map was applied after a clean edit and converting to B&W using the "Sprightly B&W" action from Pure Photoshop Actions - purephotoshopactions.com/.
Well, most of the rage, anyway.
The hands here, despite my best efforts, ended up not quite rage-y enough. They're more like jazz hands. Oh well.
Gatehouse. Sits at the end of the lane up to a former Rectory in Tyrone. Somehow this treatment seemed apt, because it just looks old. Tried out a wee gradient map here.
—Ray Bradbury
today was another cool, windy day in san francisco. as i walked to the store this afternoon i could see the fog pouring over twin peaks, making its final descent across the mission and into my neighborhood (south beach/mission bay).
the fog almost never reaches us, though. sometimes i actually wish it would!
AB Ring flash boomed high right with 30inch moon unit.
1 Speedlite w/ yellow gel shooting inside car interior
17-35 2.8
ARTIST - P SWEETY
PROMO SHOOT
PHOTOS BY NICK AMRHEIN
3BYONE.COM
A re-edited Walking Dead promo photo featuring Governor, incorporating a graphic novel effect.
Created in Photoshop using a gradient map and various filters.
Governor photo: www.flickr.com/photos/92390205@N06/
(Original photo is not mine)
Fixed version by me - original photo by kenyai, see belove.
( I founding original photo from Fix my pic group where peoples can leave photos for fix, manipulate etc.) . So this not connetted eny way to my Olympus or Pentax!
First I separed this photo to tree pieces: sky, mountings (behind) and that dark area on to front (each to own layers). Then I using several techniques eatch layers:
- gradient map tool for sky
- hue/saturation tool for mounting (behind)
- curves too, sharplen filter, dodge and burn tool for dark area on to front
- Frame is simple yet made with layer tool (drop shadw and sroke) and of cource withi text tool
- and some other tools what I don't remember enymore :)
We had a day out to Nelson Bay a couple of weeks ago. It started out as a wonderful day but, on arriving at Fingal Beach to give Barney a run and swim, a heavy squall came over sudden and we were soaked to the bone!
I am really happy with this photo because I captured what I set out to get! The boardwalk and mooring poles providing the perspective and the great angles from fishing rods and masts off the boats. I also love black and white photos!