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Just a little experiment in Pixelmator... I will do the same in Photoshop now and prepare 2 tutorials..
The two story Beach Lanais at retired industrialist Henry J. Kaiser’s 1955 Hawaiian Village Hotel on Waikiki Beach. This salt water pool was built early 1950s on the 1928 Niumalu Hotel’s waterfront. The 31 floor Rainbow Tower went up on this site 1968. Vintage but undated and very faded Chroma brand transparency in a group of 1958 slides. Color restored using Pixelmator Pro.
Don't remember her name. She was there at Hazardous arrival.
If someone knows. Thanks
Texture : SkeletalMess
I did this image in Pixelmator while I was flying from NY to LA.... I'm writing a tutorial for Pixelmator and Photoshop as well.
This image is inspired by the XPeria cell phone background.
Processed with Pixelmator, Photomatix, Snapseed, PhotoCopy, Portrait Painter, Snapheal, ShockMyPic for OS X
Jour 340
Dans mon désir d'apprendre et maîtriser Pixelmator Pro, j'ai créé cette image à partir de deux photos prises le 2024-12-05 à mon retour du travail. Je les ai modifié et combiné avec Pixelmator Pro, ajouté des étoiles et filigrané le résultat dans Photomator.
In my desire to learn and master Pixelmator Pro, I created this image from two photos taken on 2024-12-05 on my return from work. I modified and combined them with Pixelmator Pro, added stars and watermarked the result in Photomator.
The four on the left are from my 365 last year, I shot them during a time when I was over processing with Topaz. I thought I had lost the original RAW files, but resurrected them from my Time Machine backup and applied a normal processing instead. The 'camera man' on the right is new. All of these were shot in a mirror reflection using only natural window light with no other aids. I masked out the original backgrounds and created the wall by running a gradient image through Topaz Impressions obscurity filter, then added a lighting effect for the simulated flash. All of the color, exposure, and tonal adjustments were performed using Lightroom, while the layering, masking, and healing were done with Pixelmator. I tend to avoid using Pixelmator exposure and color adjustments, they flatten everything; however, the advanced healing tool far exceeds anything I've seen from Adobe. A Camera RAW adjustment plug-in would tremendously enhance Pixelmator, but as it is, I am strongly considering making the move to Photoshop.
Now... Both my sons are in town for a few weeks on leave from the Navy. If I can convince them to stop by this evening for a family portrait, I may have a second Hereios post... but you know how kids can be, parents are a lower priority than other things.