View allAll Photos Tagged instantapps
Looking north from backyard. Shot with my iPhone SE. worked up with Snapseed, Instant app and TitleFX.
Found this one while looking for items never posted here. Decided to use the Instant app as it was a good fit for the image. I kept the image original and didn’t apply a Polaroid style filter to it. House Finches are some of my favorite birds. Probably shot with my Sony HX-80, but I can’t swear that’s correct. Enjoy.
A Sony DSC-HX80 was put through the RNI Films app. After that it went to the Instant app and came out with a “Polaroid” film surround. Finally it was taken to TitleFX where the text was added. Whew!
Desaturated, edited and flopped, this old photo above Nevada takes on an entirely different look using the INSTANT® app.
Cheagles rule and this one plants herself pretty much where she wants to. Not posed, I was across the room and saw her jump onto our couch. She’s about 18 pounds. When she settled in I went over and took about eight or nine photos. This is one of them. I couldn’t resist posting just one more shot of this pup. Using TitleFX the shot was turned into a Fake-o-roid.
Please note: This is not my original photo!
I wish that I had been able to retain the photo credits and subject information. If anyone out there can steer me toward these details, please comment. Just wait until this puppy grows up! After obtaining this photo I transformed it entirely using the Instant app.
Those of you who regularly keep up with my photo antics already know I’ve been shooting with this camera since last summer. August, I think. I bought it at a real camera shop! That’d be Alan’s in Menlo Park, California. While it can’t make flap jacks (pancakes) it can do just about everything else. You’ll have to give about $350 for it, including tax, it is a great camera to always have by your side.
I used just about every app in my iPad to create this image. These include: iPhone SE, Snapseed, RNI Films, Quick Flip, Instant and TitleFX. I think that’s all.
...and I shot a few very quick photos with my Sony HX80. Sadly, they just weren’t crisp enough for my usual display. So I created a film simulation using RNI Films and then imported the image into the Instant app. I hope the you will agree that the photo was worth the effort, even if not any kind of prize winner. Note: The bright orange & red ovals are actually reflections of holiday lights hanging between our living room and dining room.
BAn excavator assisted in the felling of a very old Oak. I’ve learned since that the trees were taken because the new homeowner could not get a contractor to even bid if they still stood. It may be understandable, but sad nonetheless.
Gosh! I should have known this little cutie on sight. It’s another case of The Remedial Birder Strikes Again®! Shot with a Sony DSC-WX220. The original was heavily backlit and overexposed. Used Snapseed and then Instant (app) to make it real.
This is an iPhone photo that was tightly cropped and edited in Afterlight and Snapseed. Then I imported it into the Instant app and made it into a fake-o-droid. Behind these aliens is what has to pass for a UFO, flying saucer.
Began with an iPhone SE photo. Worked it up in Snapseed in order make it look like a Polaroid® photo. Then I finished it with the INSTANT® app on IOS. Enjoy!
*Read it right to left.
It’s fun to see what can be done with a photo that just wasn’t quite ready for prime time tv. Shot with my Sony DSC-HX80 and worked up using RNI Films, Instant & TitleFX apps. A new app in my iPad is QuickFlip. It was used to resize the final image. I hope that you enjoy it.
This little Fox was standing right in the middle of Little Road and picking at a fast food package someone had carelessly discarded. That’s the only road that directly connects two large thoroughfares in this neighborhood. As I passed, very slowly, by he/she ran away. So I stopped a hundred or so feet down the road and grabbed a couple of telephoto shots with my little Sony. Used the Instant app to make it more interesting.
“The Little Old House at 645 Smithstone Drive,X” and a dumpster that it will more than full of the demolished home. Faux Polaroid image used.
Leica M8.2 with Summilux 1:1.4/50 (pre-ASPH), E46 UV/IR filter, Abrahamsson Soft Release, Thumbs Up CSEP-1S, Gordy's wrist strap (strap lug mount, black leather with black wrap and O-ring strap bumper) sitting on my Think Tank Photo Retrospective 5 bag (Pinestone). (Processed with Instant App, Uploaded from my iPhone 4)
Photo was "developed" using: Sony DSC-WX220, iPad Pro, PhotoToaster, CameraBag2 and the Instant app. In CB2 I used a filter named Tri-X, which I developed for an earlier project. Dobbins ARB is only about a mile from our place in Marietta, Georgia.
Although I posted a similar image back then, this one is majorly transformed. The original was shot with a Fujifilm FinePix E900. Next, I imported it into the RNI Films app and converted it to a analog image. Still in the RNI Films app, I used their tools to both crop it and make it unique. Then I imported to the INSTANT app to place it into a faux instant framework and convert it to a simulated Polaroid 600 film. Enjoy.
An interesting note: the bee escaped! And somewhere on a CD I have that photo... but I’ve been unable to find it. If I ever do you’ll see it here on flickr.
Used the Instant app to make this slightly fuzzy photo into something worthwhile. Towhees are very skittish will take flight at the slightest movement on the photographer’s part. This is a male.
Began with a digital photo. Not sure if it was my Sony or iPhone! Worked it up in Snapseed in order make it look like a Polaroid® photo. Then I finished it with the INSTANT® app on IOS. Enjoy!
(Created when flickr was down for a day)
Fake Polaroid using the Instant app & Snapseed. Note: bears are pretty rough and tend to destroy faux Polaroid prints!!
This is an Instant App conversion from an iPhone SE photo. I’d shot a 2X photo which was just fair. Then I used Snapseed to bring out as much detail as possible. That allowed me to read the entire sign. Below the words, “NEHI COLA,” is a line that reads, “THE BEST COLA BEVERAGE.”
A couple of visitors are conversing at the back of the gallery. They are surrounded by dozens of artworks in this holiday season’s small works show, LITTLE THINGS. I thought it looked good as an instant photo. For transparency’s sake, I must add that the photo wasn’t as clear as I would have liked. A lot of work in Snapseed made it better and the Instant app sealed the deal.
Just the app that I have had for years. It even makes the real shutter sound when you upload an image! Getting motivated to shoot with my new Lomo'Instant Automat Glass Magellan. This is the same butterfly from a few posts ago, just initially processed differently and then put through the app. For me, personal vision creative processing is almost as important as comp, light and subject to turn an image into a more artistic photo (as opposed to a snapshot just witnessing a scene).
Super Zoomed with my Panasonic LX100 to 300mm. That’s four times Panasonic’s optical zoom. So, the photo was not the best. I fixed it up using the INSTANT app.
Tell me! Just how can an automobile that’s been primarily just sitting on our carport, lose all of its coolant? I need all my fingers and some of my toes to count the numerous times this car has had to be towed... none from collisions! Once again, Falcon Towing had to come by and pick it up. German Auto Repair, here in Marietta, will let me know what’s needed to get this fourteen year old VW back on the road. Arrrgh!!!
Shot with my iPhone SE and finished using Snapseed and the Instant app.
Our California family said their goodbyes early yesterday afternoon, we gathered out of doors for some parting photos. Grandkid, Ariella, was kind enough to take some pictures with my little iPhone. She snuck in a couple of fun selfies! I didn’t see them until I downloaded the photos. Cute!
Erin enjoys her favorite Starbucks concoction, a Green Tea Frappuccino after a baclofen pump refill. (Processed with Instant App, Uploaded from my iPhone 4)
From the left: Donna, Sara, Matt and Amanda. We had a great evening. I snapped an iPhone shot and made it a fake Polaroid with the Instant app. Sorry, Michael, couldn’t get you into the shot as a fake instant photo. Photo actually taken on December 28th!
I used the Instant app to convert this photo into a fake Polaroid. Jackson's aunt Amanda poses for a shot with the new graduate.
Really couldn’t figure out a title for this morning‘s flickr playtime. My photos, screenshot of image and other stuff and who knows what. Used Snapseed, Instant and TitleFX apps to have a little fun.
The original photo was made with my LG Escape 2 phone's 8 megapixel camera. It was transformed using PhotoToaster on my iPad. This was furthered using the Instant app, also on the iPad. Lots of fun!