View allAll Photos Tagged snapseed's
Photo taken in my daughter's San Diego yard for Our Daily Challenge:. Something Red.
Applied Snapseed's Dark 2 Drama effect.
My step-daughter, Amanda and her nephew, Jackson, strike a pose at a birthday dinner for Donna. I took out a busy background using Snapseed’s brush tool. The dinner was held at the Delkwood Grill on Powers Ferry Road, just a mile from our place.
I used one of those retro filters to wash the color out some, and used Snapseed's nifty Selective Adjust tool to retain the color saturation in my hair. It worked better than I expected it to.
Photographer credit goes to Joaq!
The skies are dramatic in Tana during the rainy season. I snapped this with my iPhone from the second floor of an industrial building. Processed with Snapseed's HDR filter.
the original description is sort of inaccurate, so i'm moving it to the tags. this is basically what irene looks like after she's totally stuffed herself and is trying desperately to stay awake. right around this time, she was hovering between awake and asleep but she looked totally spaced out, like we'd been slipping some bourbon in her milk.
this photo is sort of a hodgepodge of apps. It started off with the regular Camera.app in focus, but i wanted a soft blur on the image because it reminded me so much of the expression in richter's Becky painting.
Initially, i thought i might find photoshop for ios, instead, i used snapseed's tilt shift and applied it to the top of the image and then the bottom of the image resulting in a semi-uniform blur. From there, i pulled it into Darkroom and pulled down the levels a bit, a mild desaturation, and then into Vsco to apply the a2 filter, desaturate some more and then, ironically, punch up the contrast.
Don’t think I ever posted this shot. It was taken up in Helen as we all gathered for Matt and Morgan’s wedding. Used one of Snapseed’s filters to make it happen.
I photographed this leaf exactly where it came to rest on some of Donna’s crimson Chrysanthemums. Just after a session of shooting photos of a military airplane, I looked down to see exactly this near our walkway.
Then I used Snapseed to work on the image. No filters were used whatsoever, but I did work on the leaf with Snapseed’s Brush Tools. The leaf has ended up looking a lot like a watercolor. That’s a happy accident. PhotoToaster was used for the border.
Yes, it was quite windy down the beach today but my wife, Lewis and I did go for a nice refreshing walk. Since having lots of problems with Aperture and having to delete from my MacBook Pro I have ended up doing most of my processing on my iPad2 via Snapseed, which I would recommend to anyone. It's simple and has some nice little add-ons.
This has been given normal processing and then a little "kick" via one of Snapseed's Drama.
Us posing with Roman theatre masks, in the Teatro Romano de Caesaraugusta museum in Zaragoza. Photo processed by Snapseed's HDRscape filter.
Today’s a brisk, sunny day. So I took a reluctant Ritzy the Poodle for a walk. The street behind us is Crockett Drive and on it I discovered a lovely wildflower garden. Snapped away with my iPhone and my Sony. This image was enhanced using one of Snapseed’s filters.
In a bar in Shiroka Laka, Bulgaria - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shiroka_Laka These ceilings are very characteristic of the architecture
Playing with Snapseed's "vintage" filter
I'm going back and re-editing some of my old trip pics in Snapseed on my iPad. This one worked pretty well, with Snapseed's drama filter helping to pull the boat out of the mist.
Continuing with the idea of mobile (S6) portraits I decided to use myself as the subject today. It was an amazing sunny and warm day here in the UK and everyone was justified in wearing their shades for a change.
I wanted a moody look for a guy portrait so took myself indoors and shot my self-portraits in a dim room with only one window for light.
All the images were edited on the phone using Snapseed with the various settings and filters it provides. I eventually settled for this one. It was cropped to a square format, converted to B/W using Snapseed's b/w film filter and I added selective brightness and contrast to parts of the image and a little blur vignette.
202 Likes on Instagram
12 Comments on Instagram:
lachlanpayne: @imogendiks Hey Imo. This is my basic workflow. 1. Shoot with the native Camera app. Always. 2. Import to Instagram to see if it'll look good square and if any of the filters will do the job. 3. If the Instagram filters aren't sufficient I go to Camera+. This is more or less my standard editing app. 4. If all else fails (usually when the lighting is poor) I go to Snapseed. Highly functional but complicated and expensive. And often I go a bit overboard using it. 5. Take the shot back to Instagram to post. Most times I'll also add an IG filter on top of the Camera+/Snapseed edit. Hope that helps!
imogendiks: Very helpful. Thanks a bunch !
cynalva: @imogendiks thanks for asking @lachlanpayne ! I've wondered as well
solangefrancois: Awesome shot and funnily enough, I have a very similar workflow! Agree that Snapseed is great but I often go overboard on it too.
poeticwordvomit: @lachlanpayne have you heard of the app Squaready? It's purely made for IG use and allows you to save any shot in the square format required for IG.
lachlanpayne: @poeticwordvomit Haven't heard of that app, but I don't like to square crop images pre-Instagram. If that makes sense.
lachlanpayne: @solangefrancois Snapseed's biggest problem is the lack of a lightbox/library function.
lachlanpayne: #lachlanpayneawesomeamazingphotosbestinstagramereverfollowmenow
Used Snapseed's HDR mode to make the details of this plaza really stand out. Great day to be out and about in New York City snapping random images.
Part of an abandoned business found on SR-11, North of Walesboro, Indiana.
Hipstamatic (John S, Kodot XGrizzled, Standard), then touched with Snapseed's Drama1, bringing the saturation to 50%.
A photo I took a very dark and dull day. With Snapseed´s help I made it a little bit more interesting...
So it turns out that the 'thin black line' issue that bugs me (and others) so much was not Instagram's fault (I take it all back) but Snapseed's. And according to their latest update it is now fixed! So if they could now just go back through my feed and remove those annoying black lines from my old photos that'd be sweet. Anyway, here's some more from the Great Ocean Road. #roadtripbsides
521 Likes on Instagram
80 Comments on Instagram:
lachlanpayne: @lindsaydonovan Thank you, Lindsay.
danstensland: Fantastic shot
lachlanpayne: @danstensland Thanks Dan.
clairemerchant: Seen them for real... This pic is Awesome. Good memory
lachlanpayne: @clairemerchant Thanks Claire.
lachlanpayne: @sor_sora Thank you kindly.
lachlanpayne: #lachlanpaynetwelveapostles
ilookback: Like this a lot.