View allAll Photos Tagged image_manipulation,
Adams Place Bridge, Canary Wharf, London England
This is such a cool bridge, something that wouldn't be amiss in a Star Trek film, reminds me of the warp core inside the enterprise or the Nacelle (sorry I am a bit of a Star Trek Geek).
I little bit of image manipulation going on here, just wanted to try it for a bit of fun and it really worked out quite well. Just love all the shapes and lines going on here.
This bridge is certainly one that I will be revisiting in the near future and also can't wait until all the other Crossrail stations are open if they are as good as this!
Location Information
Canary Wharf is a major business district located in Tower Hamlets, east London, England. It is one of the United Kingdom's two main financial centres – along with the traditional City of London – and contains many of Europe's tallest buildings, including the second-tallest in Great Britain, One Canada Square.
Canary Wharf contains around 14,000,000 square feet (1,300,000 m2) of office and retail space, of which around 7,900,000 square feet (730,000 m2) is owned by Canary Wharf Group. Around 105,000 people work in Canary Wharf and it is home to the world or European headquarters of numerous major banks, professional services firms and media organisations including Barclays, Citigroup, Clifford Chance, Credit Suisse, Infosys, Fitch Ratings, HSBC, J.P. Morgan, KPMG, MetLife, Moody's, Morgan Stanley, RBC, Skadden, State Street and Thomson Reuters
An other wonderfull place to take pictures in Stutttgart ist the chinese garden.
Also you have a wonderfull view over the city.
I used image manipulation (content sensitive filling) to get rid of a visitor standing in the pagoda, you might be able to see his outlines if you look closely^^
Only a few days left before I move to Bad Nauheim!
Polyommatus coridon, Stroud.
All my macro images are made in one shot. There are not fake backgrounds or any image manipulations on Photoshop, apart from some normal adjustments and cropping. All the work is done in the field.
I puzzled over why all the peaks of ice in this old iceberg were outlined in black. Maybe some dirt deposited at the glacier edge protected the underlying ice from erosion in an effect amplified by time? (as shot, no image manipulation). Rodefjord, Scoresby Sund, East Greenland.
12/06/2020 www.allenfotowild.com
A not-so-great photo of a sunset morphed with software into an abstract image. Happy Easter and Happy Slider Sunday!
Post-processed with GIMP/G'MIC filters and Painnt.
a little fun editing on this scene.......captured on a Fall hike on our recent camping trip
Happy Sliders Sunday
___
if you like music too (as I do), please listen to my jazz compositions
at my soundcloud.com site Paper Plane Factory
_
and/or listen to my doughter's talented voice
at her site Sophfire Alphafrau
A macro shot of oil and water processed with the Painnt app. The colors are original and come from a gradient on an iPad (with the brightness at max) under the glass dish. Happy Slider Sunday!
self portrait taken into the machine 10 april 2008.
i've jokingly started calling this one my "scary movie poster" image
Alexandre Riulena
there was no use of image manipulation software
or effects other than color correction
Canon Marck ll
Castle Bridge in Bristol on a not-so-cold Friday night, well, at least I wasn't cold whilst shooting. One of the first shots with my Nikon, and still experimenting with it. Learning never stops. For me, it has been a huge learning curve in the past few months, and although I have been photographing for years I feel that my journey really begun when I mounted my camera on a tripod for the very first time.
My strongest take is that an image should be created during a photo shoot, in-camera. Photoshop and Lightroom are powerful tools, but those are really modern versions of the darkroom. If you can imagine it, an image manipulation software can create it. For me, however, the best thing about photography is the creativity, immersing yourself in the moment of capturing a scene, the travel, meeting new people, but mostly - the fun.
Thank you to Paul, Dave and Scotty for a great night out.
I captured the little guy behind your lens, the one who really captures all your images when you click the shutter...
He's just taking a little break, enjoying the view.
(Focus stack of 9 images, focussing alternatively on the man behind the lens, the lens front, lens aperture blades and the lens flares in that order -- no other image manipulation than focus stacking and some minor retourching / levels curve was done)
This afternoon i was having a play around in photoshop using stock images from www.sxc.hu/index.phtml i don't usually double upload in one day but i want to share. I quite like this. :-)
The image manipulation was created from 4 stock images and 2 textures.
Images created by HDR, Tone mapping, Photomatix are all, to me, like exotic dishes that require special utensils- which I don't possess, but want to try cooking at some point. You would have seen these images in streams like thepres6 or flopper's. Those are authentic places where you will get that cuisine. This is something that I cooked with the pot, and have extensively garnished.
This is a shot of a sunset as seen from my workplace. A shot taken a minute before this, from the same series, is on the comments section. Geotag will show no lake here :-)
I am gridlocked at work. I will catch up soon!
Have a fantabulous Thursday!