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You must see this On Black
Now this is much better. But there's this nagging feeling in my head that there's something missing in this.
Is it the face (over-exposed)?
Or the pose? Maybe the shadows are distracting?
Help me out guys. Be as harsh as you can
I think I gotta reduce the intensity of the snoots. I did try that, but then the colour filter was totally ineffective. I could have added the hues in CS2, but then again, what's the point?
This is a photo in two parts because I couldn't get back far enough to capture the whole thing in one shot. This is an installation for the Culture Crawl preview show. I'm trying to demonstrate the process of making an altered book.
More about this on my blog.
Me on 11 May 2016 (as seen by my camera program, which didn't exist back then) waiting in the departure lounge to visit Naomi in Japan (and incidentally bring three cats as part of our move there (I brought Bonkers, Argent, and Nobuo)).
Made with Processing.
With these last two stills, I have created concentric spheres which dictate the positioning of relevant generations. The inside gets occluded pretty quick but enjoying the implied depth. Would love to make 3D prints or metal casts of these some day.
Live webcam input gets poked and prodded by the audio input. Essentially, each pixel's brightness responds to different frequencies of the incoming audio. Dark pixels listen to the bass and bright pixels listen to mid-range. In order to get a better frame rate when running fullscreen, I am checking pixels in an alternating grid. Ended up liking the effect.
Video available for your perusal here.
Process by Yonoh
Pleg (aplique para lzflamps), Mosaic (lámparas Artecoon), One (perchero atoproducción), Esence (aparador para Ruarte)
20-09-2011
© Yonoh
This week for 52 Weeks of 2011 the theme was "Processing, before and after"... this is the after, most done in Lightroom. The after is below.
Found an interesting glitch resulting from a strange edge case in a beta version of Processing. Based on this photo by spcbrass, licensed under CC-BY-SA.
Tried the Van Dyke process today with little success. Not as easy as Cyanotype but I’m not giving up!
I took this photo of my wife in 1985, Ektachrome, 35mm Voitlander VSL. Originally printed on Cibachrome. I scanned the picture and converted it to a digital B&W negative