View allAll Photos Tagged negative
spooky with a little bit of humor mixed in.
I took the image facing into the sun to get the long shadows from the gravestones.
In photoshop, I inverted the image to make it look like a film negative, then I desaturated it, added the text and used the healing brush to remove a bit of unwanted sunglare spots.
oh and I am finally caught up with posting....yay!
To produce this negative space drawing I firstly applied a graphite background using a graphite stick, then using a rubber I erased the negative space around the figure and chair. By using negative space it helped train my eyes to look at the shapes surround the figure and chair rather than looking directly at the objects in front of me.
Negative FTP01319_10
The Fay Thomas Collection includes family archives relating to the Thomas family. Moses Thomas (1825-1878) was a significant figure in the history of the area now known as the City of Whittlesea, Victoria, Australia. Moses and Ann and their family lived at "Mayfield", Mernda, near Whittlesea, Victoria.
YPRL hold digital copies of the Papers of the Moses Thomas Family held at State Library Victoria
Copyright for these images is Public domain but a credit to the Fay Thomas Collection and YPRL would be appreciated.
Enquiries: Yarra Plenty Regional Library
this is one of a set of 4 photos i took the day/night we had volcanic ash in the sky as i have said in the photo called (volcanic ash) the krazy colourd one if you would like to read and the one next to this of the plane line in the sky,thanks...
I grounded the negative rail of the bridge supply to ground through a .1uF 250V film cap, although I will probably replace this with a .1uF 1KV ceramic capacitor later.
Among the photos I took, this is one of the 4 that I like most. the lighting and the viewers' facial expression are captured well to me. Do you think so? The only thing I don't like is the composition. It might be better to move more to the left and include the person at the front. But if I moved in that way, I might not be able to see the two guys.
These are various views, low on the weir of Hog's Back.
I decided to play with how the snow looked in negative. The B&W images are the most impressive, with the flowing water looking like liquid fire.
Nikon D2H
Focal Length: 44mm
White Balance: Shade
Color Mode: Mode II (Adobe RGB)
RAW (12-bit)
1/6 sec - f/22
Lens: 35-70mm f/2.8 D
Sensitivity: ISO 200
Nikon F90X | Nikon 28mm-105mm 3.5-4.5D | Kodak Colour 200 @ 400, +1 dev
Scanned with Nikon Coolscan 5000
Home developed in Unicolor | 4.6min (Dev) 6min 102F
Negative Lab Pro v2.2.0 | Color Model: Frontier | Pre-Sat: 3 | Tone Profile: LAB - Soft | WB: Fuji | LUT: Frontier