View allAll Photos Tagged pixelmator
Waikiki Hotelier Roy Kelley’s Edgewater Hotel viewed from the pool deck. This hotel fronted on Beachwalk mauka (inland) side of Kalia Road for over 50 years. Demolished 2006 and replaced by the 21 floor Embassy Suites Waikiki Beach. Vintage but undated and unbranded cardboard mount color transparency. Severe fading was color corrected using Pixelmator Pro.
Photo details
- 1950 makai (seaward) wing (7 floors), left
- 1952 mauka (inland) wing (8 floors), right
@strobist: two SB24 left and far right, skyports, D70 50mm f1.8. I can't really remember the strobe's settings, sorry.
What I used:
1) GeekTool (Available for free on the Mac AppStore)
2) Photoshop (Pixelmator or any other image editing software is fine)
3) Nocturne (Free software by BlackTree code.google.com/p/blacktree-nocturne/)
4) Wallpaper (Sunset at Sea from wallpapers-place.com/nature/sunset-at-sea-hd-wallpaper/)
5) Terminal, just to make the Dock 2D instead of the regular glass dock
6) Font: Helvetica Neue - Ultra Light (comes with every Mac)
What I did:
1) GeekTool: Displays the time and date. Time in words is a Geeklet called Fuzzy Time which can be found here www.macosxtips.co.uk/geeklets/system/display-time-in-word...
2) Photoshop: Erase of the image except for the clouds and the glow of the sun. Set the original image as the wallpaper and overlay this on top using GeekTool
3) Nocturne: Great app that turns your Menu bar black, works best when translucent menu bar is set to 'off' in System Preferences
4) Terminal: Only if you want the flat 2D dock instead of the usual glass tray. Paste the following in Terminal and hit Return
defaults write com.apple.dock no-glass -boolean yes; killall Dock
When you want the glass dock, just replace 'yes' with 'no' and run it again
Take a few minutes this memorial day to actually think about and appreciate all those who risk their lives for us every day. Pray for the ones still fighting with family back home. And number one, NEVER take your freedom for granted.
And on that bombshell, happy Memorial Day!!! (Top Gear U.K., anyone? No? Ok.) I really wanted to do something for Memorial Day, and this is what I came up with! (Inspired slightly by Tahdas on the BAF.)
Tell me what you think! Comments and criticism welcome!
If you fav, please comment as well.
Quite impressed with Pixelmator photo on iPad, despite the importing part. Should I review it?
Bangkok. 2019
An re-edit of a photo I took in the fall of 2006. I tried out Pixelmator Pro this time. I used one of the "Ethereal" filters. I also recently edited this same shot with the Pixelstyle editor.
Back in 2006 I did a lo-fi processed version as I was fond of doing at the time.
Rocher avec des graffitis naturels.
Premiers essais avec les applications Pixelmator Photo et Pixelmator (tout cour) sur iPad.
Camera: iPhone 13 Pro Max
Traitement: iPad Pro
François Meehan
Entstehung
Eine ältere Aufnahme, vor längerer Zeit bearbeitet: Lampenputzergras im Vorgarten.
Ich bin momentan leider sehr beschäftigt...
Older photograph, processed some time ago:
fountain grass in the front garden.
I'm really busy right now...
Tools: Aperture, Analog Efex Pro 2, Pixelmator.
Ewa view (more or less west here) of the Waikiki Beachfront from the Moana Hotel. Waterman Woody Brown’s streamlined catamaran Alii Kai is beached at left awaiting passengers for a cruise around Waikiki. Vintage but undated cardboard mount Ektachrome Transparency in a group of late 1950s slides. Color corrected using Pixelmator Pro.
Photo details
- 1901 Moana Hotel courtyard, foreground
- 1941 Outrigger Canoe Club beach, above the Moana
- 1927 Royal Hawaiian Hotel, above the Outrigger Club
Waikiki beachfront at the Surfrider Hotel viewed from the neighboring Moana Hotel. Early 1950s based on the support cables on the palm trees. Vintage but undated and severely faded cardboard mount Anscochrome color transparency, color corrected in Pixelmator Pro.
Photo details
- 1901 Moana Hotel, far left
- 1952 Surfrider Hotel connected to the Moana, center
- 1941 Waikiki Bowl far right
Looking down the main street, Washington Avenue, into Golden from the Colorado School of Mines, near the intersection with 16th Street. It had stopped snowing, but it was still looking a little gloomy outside. The snow was turning to a mixture of ice and slush, making it very slippery on the road and the sidewalk!
Golden, Colorado, USA.
iPhone 6 - Photograph taken with the back-facing camera on an iPhone 6.
Camera - The native camera app was used to capture the image without the HDR option.
SKRWT - Image straightened. Trapezoidal crop applied to alter the apparent perspective.
Photoshop Touch - Image cropped to 16:9 aspect ratio and resized it to 3264 x 1836 pixels.
Snapseed - Structure filter applied. Overall lighting changes carried out.
Photogene 4 - Applied the Sharpening filter. Modified the White Balance.
Snapseed - Selective lighting changes carried out to lighten and de-saturate the sky region.
Pixelmator - Used the Retouching tool to attenuate numerous dark smudges related to snow on the windscreen in front of me when taking the photograph.
ExifEditor - EXIF data from the original photograph transferred to the final image.
(Filed as 201412??_iPadMiniRetina ??? SKRWT-PhotoshopTouch-Snapseed-Photogene4-Pixelmator-ExifEditor.JPG)
Right off the Blue Ridge Parkway, Altapass is part orchard, part museum and part blue grass music stage. I used HDR to bring out the color and composited extra lens glares – rather than try to hide the onse that were there.
I have been exploring the Mandala function in Pixelmator 3.1. The base image for these trials was the Lilly of the Ice image posted earlier.
The Mandala and Kaleidoscope feature of Pixelmator are fascinating. After cropping the image, I did not like the blue [sky] background of the images. All of them had a strong vignette I could not get rid off.
So I applied the Tiffen Hicon2 and the NCR9 Rosey Hi-Light filter to some before sharpening them some more.
I'm sure I'll try this again with a different and better focused image sometime.
And no, I don't see anything spiritual in them, they are just plain fun to generate and look at.