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Created for the Magnificent Manipulated Masterpieces
Thanks to Marco Verch for the use of this source image:
www.flickr.com/photos/30478819@N08/50688523923/
The photography and dogwood photo shapes are my own. The filters are from Photoshop.
Thanks everyone for your views, comments, invites, awards and faves.
From one large paint brush to another, this is how to work.
Wait is he really painting that? Wow that must have taken a long time to accomplish.
Happy Macro Mondays
Agulo / La Gomera / Canary Islands / Spain
Album of Spain (Canary Islands): www.flickr.com/photos/tabliniumcarlson/albums/72157719902...
Album of "Doors Of The World": www.flickr.com/photos/tabliniumcarlson/albums/72157625999...
Into the Light - Day 178 - Year 2022
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too far away but caught it in flight
house siding and beat up tomato cages
skewed to 90 degrees
went madly with the paint bucket
Full perm paintbucket and brush. This Paintbucket has 5 versions: Lid on with handle up and down, lid off with handle up or down and lid to side. It also comes with a separate paintbrush. It's available now on the second life marketplace.
One of my more unrealistic images of late. At the last minute, I decided to see what what happen if I used control points in Silver Efex to allow some of the reds to appear. But, that wasn't enough for me. I had to bring the shot back into Elements where I played with the paint bucket feature to spread the reds more consistently through the image. Having some fun.
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For maximum effect, click the image, to go into the Lightbox, to view at the largest size; or, perhaps, by clicking the expansion arrows at top right of the page for a Full Screen view.
Don't use or reproduce this image on Websites/Blog or any other media without my explicit permission.
© All Rights Reserved - Jim Goodyear 2020.
I have been trying to manufacture this color red for a border for a while. The rest of the image was highly manufactured as well with a lot of work in Elements including the rather extreme conversion.
Although I typically photograph near perfect examples of flowers, I do take what is available at times. Going with the flow of the decay, I sent this pic to Analog Efex 2 to exaggerate its decline. For the first time ever, I used the polygon selection tool to create a key border around a photo. I was frustrated to have only pure white or black or sloppy borders to choose from so used the paint bucket feature to choose a color of the flower and add a low intensity of it to the border. Tricky and time consuming. Maybe why I process most of my pics naturally! But, time is not scarce these days.
I appreciate every comment on my photos, but please do not add invites with gaudy images bigger than thumbnail-size or any animated gifs - thank you!
Someone artfully stacked he paint buckets in the living room of the completely pink painted house as a art statement.
A very short hike from the lodge is the cliff overlook from where I took my sunset pics. On the way back, I decided to take a pic of the lodge. This is an artificial rendering. When I reduced the noise in the sky, an unappealing texture was left. Kind of committed at that point, I used the paint bucket feature to smooth it out. Looking at the noisy version, I wonder whether it was worth the trouble. Still. I like to reward all that time processing an image by posting it.
I bought my D610 to take pics like this. I was able to get so much of the scene inside the restaurant nice and clear without much noise (the noise was primarily in the sky). My D7100 could not have achieved this. There would have been banding in the sky which would have made sharing a version with the noise unthinkable.
I have not played with hues like this for a while but the yellowish background was nearly monochrome and lent itself to a quick change.
A boring meeting doodle.
Don't ask me what went through my mind....most things go straight through my mind at meetings.
I once got into trouble for putting up a notice on the back of the staffroom door.
It said something like "Isolated? Depressed? Feeling pointless? Marginalised? Why not call a meeting?"
Ballpoint pen on the back of some minutes.
Background with paintbucket in PS.
Color Our World's Digital Paint Buckets interactive exhibit which is part of Glidden's Colortopia inside Innoventions East at Epcot's Future World in Walt Disney World, Orlando, Florida. In this exhibit, you are given digital paint brushes which change color to the bucket you "dip" them in. You paint digital images on large screens on the walls. Very cool and fun.
This answers the question that Innoventions still exists but only East and with only two active exhibits. Hope Disney finds more sponsorships for more exhibits which were always fun, entertaining and educational.
It's a big drop when you can't see where you are going.
This is very simple and can be a great result depending on content. Here I wanted to get all the focus on the steep escalator.
I used Photoshop but you can probably do the same in other programs. Copy the base layer so that it can be modified. You should never modify a base (background) layer. Using a copy of the layer is called "non-destructive editing".
On the new layer, either apply a strong Gaussian blur. Add a mask to the new layer, because mask are awesome and basically allow you to adjust the impact of the layer which is reversable.
For example, if you use and eraser, and erase the blurred layer above the escalator to allow the bottom layer to show through at the point, it is very difficult to restore the erased part if you make a mistake.
Using a mask, you affect the visibility or opacity of the new layer, and if you want to change it, you can easily restore it partly or wholly.
You should be able to find many explanations of basic masking, but briefly, add the mask, completely colour the mask BLACK with paintbucket (because it makes the mask invisible) then switch colour to white (becaue it makes the mask visible) and use a brush tool to paint on the mask where you want to allow the blur to have an impact. Using BLACK or WHITE with the brush, allows you to remove of reinstore the visible effect of the mask.
I hope that is clear.
Just wrapped up a photo shoot for a printing and promotion company. These are buckets of ink used in the silk screen process of printing t-shirts.
For me, working the scene just starts at the scene. When I upload the image to my computer, I can then rework it numerous ways as I did here. I started off just taking pictures of this painted cement structure several different ways. With the bicyclists passing by here in #1. Then I shot the side facing the path which includes the red vase. Enhanced and cropped to a vertical orientation in #2. I then cropped it square. I included a black and white version of that step earlier (It would be 3bw if I were including it in this series). After cropping it square, I then processed that square two different ways. In 4A, I used the Pop Art feature in Elements 12 to create the four hue pic. I retraced my steps back to the original square (what would be 3A), then used the straightener feature to tilt it. That makes the blank triangles blue. So, I altered the hue to red and slid the brightness and saturation sliders to try to approximate the red that was already in the tilted square. I had to recrop to add more blank space so I could add the black border without cutting off much of the corners. It took some time but was all fun and really not difficult. I had done pop art and a similarly tilted image before so drawing on past experience.
Images from the Painting Studio of Deann Hebert of Franklin, TN.
You can visit her gallery at the Franklin Factory and see her wonderful paintings at www.deanndesigns.com/
Definitely an artist with her own style and a voice of color!!
For Rubies Treasures letter 'B' challenge.
the beehives are from a painting by Brother Jones. The field backgroiund is RubyBlossom's Bees from Wikipedia and paintbucket, the model from free Photoshop stock.
Overturned trash cans left over from Flower Mart are lined up in a colorful display awaiting their next festival assignment.
Images from the Painting Studio of Deann Hebert of Franklin, TN.
You can visit her gallery at the Franklin Factory and see her wonderful paintings at www.deanndesigns.com/
Definitely an artist with her own style and a voice of color!!
This is the Lake George ICM image just transformed in Photoshop Elements 12 to create the worn paint look. The red color was the trickiest part.
Further processing play. A variety of Elements filters with a border from Perfect Effects 8 and a border color from Elements.