View allAll Photos Tagged prohdr
Sunset view from the back parking lot of work using an iPhone + Bracket Mode app + Pro HDR app with heavy noise reduction. Smooth but lots of details lost.
Iphone 3Gs + prohdr app + filterstorm app + lo-mob app.
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More photos taken with an iPhone 3Gs here: this | strange | fruit.
Apps: Hipstamatic, ProHDR, Photo fx, Blur fx, Iris Photo Suite, Simply B&W
This photo was inspired from the book "The Mysteries Of Harris Burdick" (Chris Van Allsburg's children's' book) that is introduced by Jamesworks. Thanks, Jamesworks.
Please refer to hrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca/davidc/6c_files/documents/mysteries...
2011.01.25
in the Solid Square in Kawasaki
川崎 ソリッドスクエア
iPhone 4,Pro HDR,Photogene,Camera+,Iris Photo Suite
I saw these trees this morning going to work, and i had to give them a chance :-)
used proHDR + photogene + lo-mob
Took this with my iPhone whist looking for places to take my Nikon for some HDR. I used the proHDR app.
Shot with ProHDR iPhone app. Perspective straightened with Straightview iPhone app. Fog by Chicago Mother Nature.
Taken on Ft Lauderdale Beach by iPhone4 - ProHDR
Drives me mad this one. I have a leave-it-at-the-beach philosophy, which means not messing around with an image once I've left the moment. It shows several elements about iPhone photography that are a weakness, including the way that bright yellow-orange burns a hole in the image, and that famous iPhone4 redeye-daisy.
Most of the image here comes from the darker exposure - the brighter one simply had the foreground foam ( the same wave but breaking). But the very HDR processing gave this image a magical quality that working simply from the dark original just couldn't replicate.
I like this shot in that it IS spontaneous, and that is something I thrive on. If a worked on image doesn't immediately seem an improvement then it stays in the can.
Actually taking shots like this isn't as random as it looks. With a sky like this the shot is always there, if you know what I mean. I'm just looking for an excuse to take a shot at it - a passing gull, a fisherman, someone out swimming, or a rogue wave rolling in.
Early in a morning a rolling wave can appear very dark, especially if there are rain clouds behind me in the western sky. This means some unexpected light occurs.
As @catrionadonagh observed over on G+, a delicious cocktail for the eyes!
I've been driving past this tree for a long time. I just noticed it about a week ago & today finally got the chance to stop. ProHDR was the only app used.
The Process
This was taken with ProHDR. Though that picture turned out nicely I still felt it a little lacking in depth and "interestingness". So it was off to the photo app lab.
My first step was to run it through Tiltshift Generator to give it some depth. Other than because it was the closest point of focus, I liked using the near corner of the cottage as the focal point because of the lamp, which I had plans for. Blowing out the color and adding a moderate vignette rounded out my efforts here.
Next, I turned to LensFlare to add a flare to the lamp. Though the lamp was already lit it was just too light out at the time to capture this. So I opted to embellish a little more.
Finally, I turned to PhotoForge2 to apply the Polarizer filter to balance out the colors.
So that's hope. You you enjoy the final product.
The Picture
My wife and I stayed in this cottage recently for my birthday in Berkeley Springs, WV. This is a reconstruction of the original cottage occupied by the original keeper of the roman baths in what at the time was known as Bath. Though tiny, the cottage is quite cozy and within walking distance of downtown. If you are ever in the area I highly recommend that you pay the town a visit.
Explore #17 on July 20, 2011
Silly (Belgium) - Sentier de la Flache
Taken with an iPhone 4, processed with CrossProcess+ProHDR+Filterstorm.