View allAll Photos Tagged ipadpro
My Stylised imagery is created from my photographs, I edit them using various techniques on my iPad Pro. I use a combination of the apps listed below:
Retouch for Clone stamp editing and blur brush
Tangled FX for outline work
Procreate for Brush Strokes, image merging and Layering
Stackables for Texture creation and layering
Photomator for upscaling, denoise, debanding, super resolution, fine image adjustments and exporting of final imagery
Bayfield, Ontario
IpadPro and pencil with icolorama app/
I am now into doing water brush effects on my photos. I'm a Gemini so some of you might understand
I don’t often do uppy shots, so when I shot this one, my inner ear canals gave me a funny turn and made me feel as though I’d downed a neat gin or two.
To all you young photographers sniggering, your time will come 😉
St Wystans Church, Repton Derbyshire
Testing! Whilst I don’t see myself fully replacing my MacBook Pro just yet, I’ve been rather impressed by the effectiveness of the iPad Pro and the Adobe suite. This short series was captured using my regular Nikon rig and then handled as follows:
1) Direct transfer to iOS Camera Roll on the iPad Pro via USB-C
2) Import to Lightroom mobile
3) Crop, WB and other general adjustments in Lightroom
4) Sharpening and noise reduction in Photoshop mobile
For me, the findings are as follows:
Editing & File Management:
+ Seamless file sharing throughout Adobe
+ Intuitive gesture-based editing with the iOS versions and the Apple pencil
- Some major Lightroom features simply aren’t there e.g. side-by-side compare for culling and export directly to Photoshop
- No access to advanced sharpening tools such as Topaz deNoise
- Restricted file sizes
- At some point I still need to transfer the RAW files over to my external SSD
Flickr Mobile:
- Really strangely there’s no direct description or hashtag options pre-upload (I’m adding all of this post-upload)
- Multi-shot upload is clunky
- No rich text editing
Overall I feel it’s 90% there.
My Stylised imagery is created from my photographs, I edit them using various techniques on my iPad Pro. I use a combination of the apps listed below:
Retouch for Clone stamp editing and blur brush
Tangled FX for outline work
Procreate for Brush Strokes, image merging and Layering
Stackables for Texture creation and layering
Photomator for upscaling, denoise, debanding, super resolution, fine image adjustments and exporting of final imagery
Rock Samphire or sea fennel, is an edible wild plant.It is found on southern and western coasts of Britain and Ireland.
My Stylised imagery is created from my photographs, I edit them using various techniques on my iPad Pro. I use a combination of the apps listed below:
Retouch for Clone stamp editing and blur brush
Tangled FX for outline work
Procreate for Brush Strokes, image merging and Layering
Stackables for Texture creation and layering
Photomator for upscaling, denoise, debanding, super resolution, fine image adjustments and exporting of final imagery
The field mushroom is a widely eaten gilled mushroom closely related to the cultivated button mushroom. These were found in the garden at Trerice.
My Stylised imagery is created from my photographs, I edit them using various techniques on my iPad Pro. I use a combination of the apps listed below:
Retouch for Clone stamp editing and blur brush
Tangled FX for outline work
Procreate for Brush Strokes, image merging and Layering
Stackables for Texture creation and layering
Photomator for upscaling, denoise, debanding, super resolution, fine image adjustments and exporting of final imagery
My Stylised imagery is created from my photographs, I edit them using various techniques on my iPad Pro. I use a combination of the apps listed below:
Retouch for Clone stamp editing and blur brush
Tangled FX for outline work
Procreate for Brush Strokes, image merging and Layering
Stackables for Texture creation and layering
Photomator for upscaling, denoise, debanding, super resolution, fine image adjustments and exporting of final imagery
At the south end of Playa la Ropa there is a mangrove conservation area with a restaurant on either side. Restaurante El Manglar on the south side is where this photo was shot.
Trees along the edge of the restaurant are home to dozens of iguana. The restaurant feeds greens to the iguana daily around 1:30 PM. Yup, the iguana know it's feeding time and wait patiently to fight over the soon to arrive food.
Young iguana are a light coloured green. As they age their colours darken.
I’ve shot this Angel quite a few times but since it’s my birthday today I figure I’m allowed another go at it. #ShotOnLumix
A lone mushroom growing on an old stump among a bunch of lichens. Taken on the Green River trail #213, south of Goat Mountain in Gifford Pinchot National Forest.
The Buxton Crescent is an iconic, Grade I-listed, Georgian building; one of the most architecturally significant buildings in the country, and one of the first purpose-built hotels in the UK.
It was built by the fifth Duke of Devonshire in the 1780s as a centrepiece to establish Buxton as a fashionable Georgian spa town.
Restoration completed in 2020 it’s now a hotel once more. The building in the foreground is a tourist information centre.