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7 to 1 panorama stitching in LR7
Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/lowtec/
Westbound Metrolink is just merging with the BNSF main near Iowa Ave in Riverside. This train originated in South Perris and came through Perris, Moreno Valley, and Hunter Park Riverside.
Hi Guys!
We just started with our brand new store!
We are happy to present you our first item;
Merge - Santa Vibrator
at the XXX event
▶ Features:
▹100% original mesh & design
▹High Quality textures
▹Control HUD to control all features
▹5 animations
▹3 sauce textures
▹+1 exclusive texture for fatpack only
{DEMO available}
You can find the item on xxx event
{In case of any issues or questions please contact Gracorexus or pujaarya
or xxmergexx inworld}
Merged via photoshop. This had 2 Elinchrom flash/soft boxes. One pointing to the ceiling and the other direct at the subjects. 3 separate pictures converted to b&w and then I used photoshop to select the heads and then refined the edges. Finally I pasted the 3 heads as layers into a new black inage.
Something a bit different. No Photoshop here...just cardboard.
I was aware of things like the splitzers you can buy/make for your Lomo so I thought I'd try something similar with my Hasselblad. I put together a makeshift splitzer by cutting some black cardboard to fit in a Cokin holder. Composing through a 45° finder while your camera is upside down is challenging to say the least. I possibly should have composed so that there was no ground in the shot (that's what's causing the weird diagonal parallelogram thing) but feck it, this is ok.
Hasselblad 500c/m, Planar 80mm, Tri-x 400, Cokin P holder and cardboard filter :)
My friend Paul Berkholst from the Netherlands and I are collaborating. I send him a landscape foto , he does a watercolor painting of it and then I combine both trying to preserve qualities of each work...It's a project in progress and here is 1 example...
Paul's flickr account
This is just meant to show the numbers of deer that show up at breakfast looking for a handout! (It is a photo merge of three images, so is not going to be technically correct.)
There are eighteen deer in this shot and there are more in the front yard. This is actually the side of our house. As you can see they have nibbled every twig and trimmed the cedars. The green covers (straight back) are on spruce we planted and we wanted to stop the deer eating them. They really prefer the cedars anyway... but better safe than sorry!
This is what we see through the sliding glass doors in the dining room. The lynx walked from right to left back behind those covered spruce and the photo of it's rump was taken diagonally to the left where that other group of deer are.
The deer are quite curious and watch us eat. Our dog, Kita, sits right here and watches them. They are skittish but only run off if any of us makes a sudden move. Lately, with all the predators around, they are really nervous.
I-94 Southbound - Lake Forest Oasis
52Frames - Week 33 - Night Photography (Alternate)
I was intent on shooting light trails for this week's 52Frames challenge on Night Photography.
Of the many shots I took, this is the #2 pick. I set-up at a tollway oasis, camera on tripod, just shooting away at traffic light trails. While the light trails were good, the photo was boring. So I captured some higher shutter speed shots with vehicles and ghosted them in via a 3-image composite (first ever) using blend mode and opacity adjustments in PS.
Taken 8/12/20
Golden Spike Utah, Spring 2014
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The "Golden Spike" (also known as "The Last Spike"[1]) is the ceremonial final spike driven by Leland Stanford to join the rails of the First Transcontinental Railroad across the United States connecting the Central Pacific and Union Pacific railroads on May 10, 1869, at Promontory Summit, Utah Territory. The term "Last Spike" has been used to refer to one driven at the usually ceremonial completion of any new railroad construction projects, particularly those in which construction is undertaken from two disparate origins towards a meeting point. The "Last Spike" now lies in the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University.
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Photography by Stefano Carini ©2014