View allAll Photos Tagged pixelmator
This is from my Pixelmator tutorial on styling text with clipping masks, quartz filters, gradients and more...
Candlelight service on Christmas Eve.
Handheld Sony RX100 Intellegent mode full auto, no flash with Pixelmator touch up.
Capture: iPhone SE 2016 with Vistax camera app.
Post processing: RAW Power and Pixelmator for iOS on iPad Mini 5
This Camera App Icon was a personal challenge to see if I could build a decent camera lens in Pixelmator
The image is an original sketch that I did in pen and ink. I collaged with the origami paper. The digital editing was done in Pixelmator.
strobist: two SB24 qutite close to the left and at the far right as rim light. triggered with skyports.
Somehow my selfbuilt softbox on the left strobe ruined it... i couldn't freeze the rider anymore...
D70 50mm f1.8
I think one man somehow broke his legs and he wants to play football. So i guess he has look something like that.
I may have over-sharpened this shot slightly. Okay, a lot. :)
I finally learned how to use the Pixelmator program for the Mac to do layer editing on the cheap. It is astonishingly fast, rendering most effects instantly. It has been a bit difficult shifting paradigms between Lightroom and a layer editing program. Searching for tutorials has helped a lot :)
To see my review of pixelmator: www.amazon.com/review/R2FHN3MKA1AXNB/ref=cm_cr_rdp_perm
Please vote if you thought it was helpful or not :)
Eric
These deer waited in some trees to the right until they apparent found the appropriate moment to dash across the street in front of us.
I’ve been fascinated by infrared photography ever since I bought my first DSLR. The atmosphere of the images, both black and white and fake colour conversions, always had something special. So when I went to Japan earlier this year, I decided after some thorough research to give it a try. Australia, after all, has plenty of bright sunlight to spare!
Technical details:
The Olympus E-5 seems to work rather well for infrared photography, and I also didn’t have any trouble with the Zuiko 12-60mm lens. The Kenko Pro1 Digital R72 filter is an inexpensive way to get into infrared photography and is just as easily removed as any other filter, so it’s much less of a committment than a total camera conversion. On the software side I shot RAW, changed the white balance to 2000K and around -20 tint in Aperture, then exported the photo to Pixelmator. There I used the channel mixer to swap the red channel to less red and more blue, the blue channel to less blue and more red (adjusted to taste, not 100%). Finally, the image was sent back to Aperture to receive some level adjustment and other tweaks including lowering red colour saturation a little. I’m still working on the details, so all the photos in this series will have a slightly different look!
Also have a look at my website at www.focx.de :)