View allAll Photos Tagged skrwt
Look up.
This is a building on the Tufts campus, shot with iPhone 6s in raw using lightroom mobile. Ever wonder how people get the lines to match up just right in these kinds of shots? The answer is often to just get as close as you can, and then use an app like SKRWT to adjust the rest.
Abstract of the interior architecture at South Station in Boston, MA USA. Photographed via iphone 8+, edited in VSCO app as well as Camera+ app, then manipulated via SKRWT app (MRRW)
This is a building on the Tufts campus, shot with iPhone 6s in raw using lightroom mobile. It’s really hard to get the symmetry just right on this kind of shot - any tips and tricks? Put them in the comments! Here I got it almost right but then used the app SKRWT to fix it a bit more. I might try to do this building again sometime and see if I can get the symmetry exactly perfect on my own.
Photo taken and edited with iphone4S, cam apps: ProCamera, postpro apps: Superimpose, Elasticam, TouchRetouch, Stackables, PhotoPower, SKRWT, Snapseed.
Twitter/IG/EyeEm/Tumblr: @adesantora
At a Bleeker Street brownstone.
Samsung Galaxy A20 with 3.60mm f/1.9 at 1/40 ISO 100. Keystone correction with SKRWT.
Being a part of the Boston photography community and seeing all the inspiring work by other photographers has taught me a lot about symmetry and the importance of having a person in the shot - where in the past I would have thought of people as being in the way, now I try to think of ways to have them add interest to the scene. This building is on Dartmouth street in the Back Bay of Boston. Shot with my iPhone 6s in LRM raw, used LRM to adjust colors and contrast and SKRWT to perfect the symmetry.