View allAll Photos Tagged snapseed's

Red fire escapes on an old tenement building in Manhattan's San Juan Hill neighborhood.I used Snapseed's "healing" tool to erase part of a store sign that was a little distracting. thanks everybody,and HANW!

Iceland in September 2017 - one of the best vacation trips of my life! This truly beautiful lonely house has been newly built close to the Ring Road in the Sveitarfelagio Hornafjörður region (exact space see map).

 

This is a single shot at ISO 100 , 1/250 - Sony Alpha 6000 and a Samyang 12 mm wide lens) edited in Snapseed (free) on a tablet.

 

I do get a lot of questions regarding my processing with snapseed. I typically go to “tune image”, adjust the “ambiance” and then play around with the “brush” feature eg. “dodge and burn”. After these adjustments I typically add some tonal contrast.

 

I must say I love snapseed´s ability to smartly select areas for selective retouching; its Ambience tool provides a wonderful combination of brightness, shadow opening, warmth, and even incredible highlight protection all at once.

 

Thank you very much for taking the time to look. Hope you enjoy and potentially learn something! Big thanks to the amazing Flickr family out there!

Quote by Robert Brault

 

This shot was taken with a Sony Alpha 6000 and a Samyang 12 mm ultra-wide lens. It was around 9 am on a foggy morning on October 21st, 2016 from the Hotel Kitzhof Mountain Design Resort.

 

Kitzbuehel is just amazing in autumn. The Austrian sports capital in the heart of the Alps, combines tradition and lifestyle as charming as any other city. The city is famous not only for its unique charm, but also for the energy of the city as well as the sporty top hotel industry and catering alike and makes Kitzbuehel the celebrity hot spot in the Alps.

 

I do get a lot of questions regarding my processing with snapseed. I typically go to “tune image”, adjust the “ambiance” and then play around with the “brush” feature eg. “dodge and burn”. After these adjustments I typically add some tonal contrast.

 

I must say I love snapseed´s ability to smartly select areas for selective retouching; its Ambience tool provides a wonderful combination of brightness, shadow opening, warmth, and even incredible highlight protection all at once.

 

Thank you very much for taking the time to look. Hope you enjoy and potentially learn something! Big thanks to the amazing Flickr family out there!

This is a single long exposure shot using a tripod (20 seconds - Sony Alpha 6000 and a Samyang 12 mm wide lens) edited in Snapseed (free) on a tablet.

 

I do get a lot of questions regarding my processing with snapseed. I typically go to “tune image”, adjust the “ambiance” and then play around with the “brush” feature eg. “dodge and burn”. After these adjustments I typically add some tonal contrast.

 

I must say I love snapseed´s ability to smartly select areas for selective retouching; its Ambience tool provides a wonderful combination of brightness, shadow opening, warmth, and even incredible highlight protection all at once.

 

Thank you very much for taking the time to look. Hope you enjoy and potentially learn something! Big thanks to the amazing Flickr family out there!

Skogafoss Waterfall, Iceland

 

Iceland in September 2017 - one of the best vacation trips of my life! Skogafoss is certainly the most impressive waterfalls I've ever had the fortune of visiting, the sheer scale of this waterfall is hard to comprehend at first!

 

Skogafoss is a must visit in Iceland to see the sheer size of this waterfall and its power.

 

The Skogafoss Waterfall is one of the biggest waterfalls in the country with a width of 25 meters (82 ft) and a drop of 60 meters (200 ft).

This majestic looking Waterfall is situated on the Skoga River in the south of Iceland.

 

The south coast of Iceland is a truly magical area; you can see glaciers, geysirs, volcanoes as well as black sand beaches, ice caps and riverbeds.

 

It was very challenging to be close to the waterfall, shoot long exposures and avoid getting soaked with all the intense mist. I had to move, block, do whatever I could – wipe the camera and lens after every try… definitely worth it though! Next time, I will block one whole day for this waterfall.

 

Wikipedia:

 

The Skógafoss is one of the biggest waterfalls in the country with a width of 25 metres (82 feet) and a drop of 60 m (200 ft). Due to the amount of spray the waterfall consistently produces, a single or double rainbow is normally visible on sunny days. According to legend, the first Viking settler in the area, Þrasi Þórólfsson, buried a treasure in a cave behind the waterfall. The legend continues that locals found the chest years later, but were only able to grasp the ring on the side of the chest before it disappeared again. The ring was allegedly given to the local church. The old church door ring is now in a museum, though whether it gives any credence to the folklore is debatable."Þrasi’s chest of gold".

 

This is a single shot at ISO 200 , 13 sec - Sony Alpha 6000 and a Samyang 12 mm wide lens) on a tripod, edited in Snapseed (free) on a tablet.

 

I do get a lot of questions regarding my processing with snapseed. I typically go to “tune image”, adjust the “ambiance” and then play around with the “brush” feature eg. “dodge and burn”. After these adjustments I typically add some tonal contrast.

 

I must say I love snapseed´s ability to smartly select areas for selective retouching; its Ambience tool provides a wonderful combination of brightness, shadow opening, warmth, and even incredible highlight protection all at once.

 

Thank you very much for taking the time to look. Hope you enjoy and potentially learn something! Big thanks to the amazing Flickr family out there!

Created for Sliders Sunday using Snapseed's double exposure effect. HSS everyone!

For Gorgeous Green Thursday. HGGT everyone!

And for Color My World Daily-green

Captured for Smile on Saturday! :-) theme: High Contrast Portrait in B&W. Edited using Snapseed's silhouette effect. HSoS everyone!

 

And for Our Daily Challenge: Face

Captured for the "We're Here!" group's visit to the "Minimalistica"

group. .And for Our Daily Challenge: Group.

 

Edited using Snapseed's Morning effect.

You can play 'spot the object' in this shot — there are a lot of them! Excluding a couple of days of planning and drying flowers, this shot took 3 hours to compose and shoot and another hour to post-process (mainly removing hot pixels!). Three separate exposures have been blended (all in Pixelmator in the iPad) — one for the left side, one for the oil lamp and one to highlight the burner flame). Further tweaking in Snapseed using multiple stack edits with #Snapseed's excellent masking capabilities.

Seen from Portland's Mt Tabor Park. Taken and processed for Sliders Sunday using Snapseed's drama effect. HSS everyone!

Tulips 2021 - Original image is a triple multi-exposure done in-camera. I did the texture with the Weathered preset in the Stackables app. The border is Snapseed''s frame 7. #stackablesapp #snapseedapp #tulips #alteredreality #ethereal_moods #editfromthesoul #everything_edited #artistry_flair #textured #masters_in_artistry #dailytextures

I captured these Blueberries last summer with iPhone and Olloclip but did this edit in Nov.

 

I did two of these dramatically altered versions on the iPad using the older version of Snapseed's color overlay's and textures.

 

I had a very hard time picking which to post. This one was the most changed so I went with it.

I may get around to posting the other version one day.

 

The original straight edit can be viewed here if you care to compare:

www.flickr.com/photos/firerybroome/15245173654/

I've never tried create a double exposure before. I put this one together using Snapseed's native double exposure tool. The main image is an overpass on the Grand River, the second is some random sky I shot a while back. Having a large dark mass on the bridge to work with made things easier to stitch together.

 

The results are okay. Good enough to post anyway. I'm going to try this again with someone as the subject in the main shot. Having someone in the shot will make it a bit more visually interesting.

This is a panorama of 4 horizontal shots (Sony RX 100 M2), stitched together in Microsoft Image composer (free) and edited in Snapseed (free) on a tablet.

 

I do get a lot of questions regarding my processing with snapseed. I typically go to “tune image”, adjust the “ambiance” and then play around with the “brush” feature eg. “dodge and burn”. After these adjustments I typically add some tonal contrast.

 

I must say I love snapseed´s ability to smartly select areas for selective retouching; its Ambience tool provides a wonderful combination of brightness, shadow opening, warmth, and even incredible highlight protection all at once.

 

Now to my quote by Mattie Stepanek: Matthew Joseph Thaddeus Stepanek (July 17, 1990 – June 22, 2004), known as Mattie J.T. Stepanek, was an American poet (or as he wanted to be remembered as "a poet, a peacemaker, and a philosopher who played") who published seven best-selling books of poetry and peace essays. Before his death (at the age of 13) he had become known as a peace advocate and motivational speaker.

 

Wannsee is a locality in the southwestern Berlin borough of Steglitz-Zehlendorf, Germany. It is the westernmost locality of Berlin. In the quarter there are two lakes, the larger Großer Wannsee (Great Wannsee) and the Kleiner Wannsee (Little Wannsee), are located on the River Havel and are separated only by the Wannsee Bridge. The larger of the two lakes covers an area of 2.7 km2 (1.0 sq mi) and has a maximum depth of 9 m (30 ft).

 

Thank you very much for taking the time to look. Hope you enjoy and potentially learn something! Big thanks to the amazing Flickr family out there!

► █░▓ ≈≈≈≈≈≈≈ ⚓️ ELEVEN MINUTES into the twilight of July 16 (after the astronomical sunset), the last barge slowly works it’s way upstream Merwede river and my real camera is already in the bag that’s in turn secured in the bike bag. No, I am not going to unpack. I am ready to leave.

 

The cameraphone can’t register detail, and the blue cast is overwhelming but some mood is still there… —Edited in Snapseed’s new UI, much more finicky to work with than the old one.

 

~SHORTCUTS~ ...→Press [F11] and [L] key to engage Full Screen (Light box) mode with black background ↔ Press the same key or [Esc] to return... →Press [F] to "Like" (Fave)... →Press [C] to comment.

Today I accidentally came across a small print of this painting and searched to see if it had been added to my flickr offerings. It had, back in 2009. It was not a very good image. So I took the original and worked on it using Snapseed’s various tools. The result is much closer to what I recall creating.

 

The painting is 8 x 36 inches, Griffin Alkyds on canvas. The white border was added by me. Enjoy!

No patience for film today, so playing with Snapseed's tools and filters...

I spotted this assemblage of Insects while bringing our doggo, Ritzy, into the house. The entire image is of an area just under two inches square. I’m amazed that was able to get a decent exposure in what was very low light. That said, I used a bunch of Snapseed’s tools to fix it up for my flickr friends.

 

Any etymologists in the audience? What are these things!?

64/365 - shot this with procamera 7 while out driving through the country. Edited with snapseed's new HDR scape filter, vscocam, distressedfx, and oggl using the new photojournalism pak.

Edited in Prisma with Believe HD

Finished using Snapseed’s tools

This sculpture was created in 1994 by Brian Fell to remember the merchant seamen of the area who died in times of war. This resonates with me, my great grandfather died aboard a merchant vessel in 1915 and was buried at sea in mid Atlantic. BTTL Photowalk Jan 2014. This is the composition I was after on this outing and I'm surprised to find Snapseed's drama setting has done a great job on creating the dramatic sky I wanted but nonetheless I shall go back with a tripod in better weather I think! Cardiff Bay has a lot to offer. Behind is the Pier Head Building which once controlled shipping in Cardiff docks. It is really quite opulent inside, with Victorian tiles and terracotta everywhere. It has the only tiled banister I have ever seen on a staircase.

This was on our way home Christmas Day. I was a passenger and although it was already dark around 5:30 p.m. in Alabama, I shot some exposures and prayed for some luck. The car in this image was heading west towards Centre, AL. We were heading east towards Cave Spring, GA. I did quite a bit of editing using Snapseed’s various tools. Hope you like it.

Just playing around with Google Snapseed's textures.

I’ve continued working on the photo that I posted this past week or so: cropping, changing perspective, converting it to monochrome and more. From the beginning I wanted to make a more artful version, but while I was travelling it wasn’t possible. All of it done using snapseed’s tools, filters and frames. I used TitleFX to affect other changes. This is the final version. Which do you like the best?

View from the infinity pool overlooking the Aegan waters from the Bill and Coo Hotel in Mykonos. Mykonos is a Greek island, part of the Cyclades, lying between Tinos, Syros, Paros and Naxos. The island spans an area of 85.5 square kilometres (33.0 sq mi) and rises to an elevation of 341 metres (1,119 feet) at its highest point. There are 10,134 inhabitants (2011 census), most of whom live in the largest town, Mykonos, which lies on the west coast. Mykonos's nickname is "The island of the winds".

 

This is a single shot using a tripod (1/13 seconds - Sony Alpha 6000 and a Samyang 12 mm wide lens) edited in Snapseed (free) on a tablet.

I do get a lot of questions regarding my processing with snapseed. I typically go to “tune image”, adjust the “ambiance” and then play around with the “brush” feature eg. “dodge and burn”. After these adjustments I typically add some tonal contrast.

 

I must say I love snapseed´s ability to smartly select areas for selective retouching; its Ambience tool provides a wonderful combination of brightness, shadow opening, warmth, and even incredible highlight protection all at once.

 

Thank you very much for taking the time to look. Hope you enjoy and potentially learn something! Big thanks to the amazing Flickr family out there!

 

iPhone 5 HDR + fiddling around with Snapseed's HDRscape.

 

An evening walk through the local wine country. Everything is finally melting after an awful winter.

For ODC: Inventive Solution,

Six Word Story,

And Sliders Sunday. Clouds courtesy of Snapseed's double exposure effect. HSS everyone!

 

THE REMEDIAL TABLETOP SHOOTER STRIKES AGAIN!

 

This little camera is just a fun thing to hang on a keychain. It doesn’t work, but if you push the shutter button it spits out a little piece of film. Sound effects included. It’s spring driven, so no batteries are required. The U.S. Penny is for scale.

 

I shot this with my iPad Pro (12.9 in.) 4th Generation. This is my second attempt to make a photo that I could easily edit. I didn’t know how much dust and hairs etc. were on that OneStop. Snapseed’s Healing Tool helped me get rid of most of it. Whew!

 

I seem to have a thing for Snapseed's grunge filter of late...

 

Samsung Galaxy S III

 

ello-a-day 8/366

Heavy edited w/ Snapseed

S-M-C Takumar 1.8/55

Just a tenth of a second later the Crow had launched itself into flight. I’ve never captured an image of a bird about to fly. Originally the crow, heavily backlit, had almost no details. Then I cropped the image and edited it using several of Snapseed’s tools.

Created for Our Daily Challenge: Flag; and for

The Flickr Lounge week 35 theme: starts with the letter "P"-Puffin

 

Processed using Snapseed's double exposure effect.

I used Prisma to enhance what was a tricky exposure. Snapseed’s brush tool helped me bring the bird out from the background. I painted a whole lot of the image, adjusting color, depth and contrast.

 

Edited in Snapseed & Afterlight apps

Edited in Prisma app with Postcard

www.iphoneographycentral.com/apps-uncovered-1-august-2014/

For this scene, I used the PerspectiveCorrect app to straighten the bricks’ vertical lines a bit, and then Snapseed’s “details” option to bring out the wall’s texture.

Earlier this summer, I spent a month traveling around South Korea, and toward end of my stay, I decided to spend a couple of days in the city of Mokpo, a port on the SW tip of the country–one section of the country that I had never before visited. The old center of the city is full of architecture from the Japanese Colonial period (1910-1945), some of it being preserved, but lots of it in varying degrees of photographically-interesting decrepitude. It was an incredibly muggy afternoon, and after a morning of hiking, I had just finished a lunch of the local specialty, octopus soup, when I walked past this wall around the corner from the restaurant. I was immediately struck by how aesthetically pleasing the proportions of the differently colored sections of brick and tile were–pleasing, and yet completely unintentional: the outline of what once had been a staircase, the weeds growing luxuriantly in what had once been an adjacent building… What gets built, what gets torn down, what gets left behind, what is deliberate versus what is spontaneous–so much goes into building a city, into deciding how to relate the history of a place, into considering what’s worth keeping and commemorating or what should be forgotten…Korea’s 20th-century history has been such a fast-paced combination of painful humiliation followed by dizzying, breathtaking modernization; the seaside city of Mokpo illustrates all of that in such a compact space, and this particular wall, to me, seemed emblematic of it all. Three days later, I flew back to the U.S.

  

—published in Lonely Planet magazine’s Winter Issue, p. 37, January 2020

НЕОЧЕКИВАНО МНОГО ЉУДИ у главном граду се не раздваја од маске – старог пријатеља који штити од опасног простора око нас.

 

► █░▓ THE NEW CATEGORY: There used to be homeless, stateless etc. persons. Now we’ve got PERMANENTLY FACELESS PERSONS too. Snapseed’s “portrait mode” filter does not recognize a face here, no matter how hard you try. There is no face here, says Snapseed. There are still eyes, say I, with lots of empathy for this gentleman. A rather resigned look, though. “I Have Surrendered” message to the world, is it not.

 

Candid snapshot from Belgrade’s public transportation bus.

The cameraphone capture edited in Snapseed app.

  

~SHORTCUTS~ Press [F11] and [L] key to engage Full Screen (Light box) mode with black background - press the same key or [Esc] to return. Press [F] to "Like" (Fave), press [C] to comment.

 

shot on the diminutive Marshall London...

 

More or less as the panorama came out of the phone, but as usual with Android photos/phones, I couldn't resist a pass with Snapseed's HDR-scape filter! 8-)

Creeped. Me out! Just look at those eyes! The other kitty had just laid down for an evening nap. Anyway, I had a blast with Snapseed’s Brush Tool. LOL

This was a 13 x 7 inch mixed-media drawing on museum board. Using primarily Snapseed’s tools, I softening, deepened and added some drama to the original twenty-three year old piece. I brightened the “lights” using the SketchClub app. Hope you like it.

 

* Instrument Landing System

We are having magnificent cloudscapes of late. Grabbed this shot in front of our friendly local Mexican restaurant, Los Bravos on Terrell Mill Road. iPhone SE and Snapseed. Used Snapseed’s b+w red filter to deepen the sky.

Created for the "We're Here!" group's visits to the "Path..." and "Five-pointed Star" groups.

And for Tree-mendous Tuesday. HTT everyone!

 

Path taken is at Glendoveer Golf Course. Edited using Snapseed's double-exposure effect.

Made this shot through a not so clean car window in low light. Used my iPhone zoomed out to 5x, give or take. Using Snapseed’s tools I spiffed it up. This view is of Centre’s main drag with Lookout Mountain in the background.

This was on our way home Christmas Day. I was a passenger and although it was getting dark around 5:20 p.m. in Alabama, I shot some exposures and prayed for some luck. We were heading east towards Cave Spring, GA. This place was situated well off the road and to the left (north) side of the 411. I did quite a bit of editing using Snapseed’s various tools. Hope you like it.

Ok, it's a fair cop. These are original colours, but I've enhanced them with Snapseed's HDRscape function. I just liked the atmosphere. snapped on the Nexus 6.

On my way home from work, I noticed a beautifully sunset laden sky slipping behind the horizon of a local family farm. Daily, I drive by this tract of fertile ground with an evolving palette of colors and texture while the sun rises in the morning through curtains of fog or a sun setting amongst pillows of clouds . Watching the fields cycle its crops of wheat to beans and cotton to corn reminds me of the finite nature of life. An appreciation of each day arises from within that keeps me driving to those moments of life that I love the most: times with with family and friends.

 

Post Processing: The photograph was captured with the Apple iPhone 6 back facing camera. It was loaded into Adobe Lightroom Mobile and three copies of the photo was created at varying exposures of +/- 2 EV. The three copies were then loaded and merged to create a pseudo HDR image in the Pro HDR X app. SnapSeed's structure filter was applied to the HDR image and then loaded into Photoshop Express where the noise reduction, defog and dappled filters were applied. Imported the resulting image back into Lightroom Mobile for final selective and overall lighting and color adjustments and a touch of vignetting. Finally, EXIFcopy app was used to copy EXIF data from the original image to the Final HDR edited image. At some point, undesirably, the resolution of the image was greatly reduced which I believe occurred when exporting the images with adjusted exposures from Lightroom Mobile.

  

The table top tree is decked out with so many bright and shiny ornaments. I love it. Shot heavily backlighted. I used many of Snapseed’s and Flickr’s tools to take it out of the shadows.

Many years ago, I had some of my photos put on mugs. I gave them to family and friends as Christmas gifts. This one, with a photo taken at Mt Hood, is the only one that I still have. (It was returned to me by a friend.) It is yellowed with age. I also have the original print photo. So here I share both with you, using Snapseed's double exposure effect.

 

ODC: Cup(s)

Sunset in a moving car. Nexus 5 HDR+ mode, edited with Snapseed's HDR Scape filter (which made it quite a bit grainier than the original).

 

Original pic without editing

 

on tumblr

This is a location I frequent on my daily walks in the Sullivan's

Gulch neighborhood. Sidewalk saying was seen along SW Lincoln St in downtown Portland. Combined them using Snapseed's double exposure effect. ODC: Expression

I think that it’s a Pine Sisken, but need to check it out! Shot with my Sony DSC-HX80 and transformed using Prisma’s Comic filter and Snapseed’s frames.

A few shriveled grape tomatoes.

Captured with iPhone and Olloclip Macro lens.

 

Was surprised to see that tomatoes had little pointy hairs sticking out of its skin.

 

Edited and converted to black and white on the iPad in Snapseed.

 

I have been experimenting more with Snapseed's Noir options. It seems to have improved a bit over the years.

 

But there are still times when I am not happy with the way the shades of gray are blending.

  

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