View allAll Photos Tagged splittoning

What happened to his riding companion? Did he have a riding companion? Both bikes look to be for a person his size...Is there a mystery here?

 

Guessing games!

 

Thanks for guessing with me.

Just one guess where this is (without looking at the tags or map)!

View from the Railway,Manchester

As I was walking back along Kai Iwi beach I happened to glance at the scenery behind and spotted this couple enjoying a wander along the beach and cliffs.

 

A heavily compressed image at 300mm but one that resonated with me the importance of taking time out, slowing down and just enjoying nature and the spectacle it provides - particularly in the crazy world we are all dealing with!

 

And I quite liked processing it with some different tones to a more standard mono type image. Hope you enjoy!

 

(c) Dominic Scott 2020

I love the way the petals seem to be shielding the precious contents from harm…

 

This is a purple striped crocus with a bright orange stamen... Honest! It was taken in my garden earlier in the year.

 

And the petals do close up in gloomy or cold weather. Which reminds me of me :)

 

One thing about having bright contrasting colours in a subject like this is that when you come to the mono conversion a colour filter gives you a lot of control over the balance of brightness between the main elements of the image. This was converted in Nik Silver Efex which is by far the best software I have found for this sort of thing. It makes things so easy. The hardest part to get half-right was the crop.

 

Happy Donnerstagsmonocrom :)

 

Thank you for looking. I hope you enjoy the image. Happy Monochrome Thursday :)

High tide was after sunset tonight, so no need for filters…. This was fun!

I was reading about split-toning last night, so today's shot is......

 

gently rubbishly subtly blatantly terribly never-to-be-repeated beautifully worth-doing-again awkwardly triumphantly*

 

......split-toned (yellow for the highlights, magenta for the shadows).

HBW!

 

*Select as appropriate

slug started a long journey from the other side of that table..

The river was as smooth as glass tonight and the humidity was through the roof. This Blue Heron was just soaking up the last few minutes of day light on a outcrop.

 

For a change, Chefchaouen without the blue.

Number 160 of my 365 photo challenge - A split-toned landscape image of a cat walking down the railway line in the evening Spring sunshine. Taken using a long lens and a shallow depth of field.

 

Talk about being in the right place at the right time! :-)

Another image taken at Camber the other weekend.

Vive le roi!

 

I hasten to add that it wasn't me who had it my way.

The view north from the Bennetts Bluff lookout on Lake Wakatipu.

 

A controlled fire was burning near the town of Glenorchy on a calm and cold morning, covering the valley to the north in a large cloud of smoke rather than mist.

Tardebigge reservoir. 120 second exposure

 

Dipping in to the archives here, this shot was taken way back in January 2015. I need to get out more :-) Here in Wales we're still in full lockdown.

Two monochromes for Donnerstagmonocrom today, both cooked in Silver Efex and split toned.

 

The first is of a succulent taken earlier this year at the RHS Rosemoor garden in Devon. I really struggled with this one and gave up twice. It’s been tweaked every which way before I finally abandoned it. It was meant to be a high key for a start…

 

The second is based on an image I took for this week’s Macro Monday but rejected in favour of a little leaf set that was about the same size but sweeter.

 

Commentary is the same for both.

 

Thank you for taking the time to look. I hope you enjoy the image. Happy Monochrome Thursday :)

Asahi Pentax-M Macro 100mm f/4

Early morning on Braddock lake in Burke, VA. USA.

A mono pano of Drax, Western Europe's largest Power station. This Panorama is from fourteen 20 second exposures.

Gone a little bit squirrel mad recently - wreaking total havoc out there but I don't care they're great to watch.

Highest position on explore: 87 on Friday, September 16, 2011

 

Spatzenversammlung mal zwei.

A bit of split toning madness with one of my bunny photos from one of those lovely misty mornings back in June.

Apparently an Englishman, Richard Newton, brought barbed wire to Argentina in 1845. But that's only according to wiki-spurious.

Fades from sight, the wilted flowers color's gone,

it's fragrance lingers on.

-Zeami Motokiyo

 

My entry for the Monthly Scavenger Hunt category "Droopy".

I suppose that manipulating photos with software could be considered a form of 'faerie magic', eh?

 

Happy SlidersSunday... :)

A lake at winter, long time exposure + HDR, Lee Little Stopper + Polarizer.

 

Camera: Canon 5DSR

Lens: Distagon Zeiss Distagon T* 2.8/15 ZE

Focal Length:15mm; Exposure Time: 2,4,10 sec;

Aperture: 14.0; ISO: 50

 

All rights reserved - Copyright © Martin Zurek

 

All images are exclusive property and may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, transmitted, manipulated or used in any way without expressed, written permission of the photographer.

 

Exploring London for the sights that rivet one's eyes is a marathon endeavor. And totally worth it.

Messing around with layers again.

France, along the Route du Champagne, a closer look

An infrared photo of a sunlight branch of maple leaves, taken in mid-November using an IR converted camera and a 590nm filter. Note to self: processing included a channel-swap, a blue and orange split-tone effect, and adjustments to hue, saturation, and brightness, all made primarily with Photoshp[.

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