View allAll Photos Tagged splittoning
Strange title, I agree. Comes from 'Laid'. Apparently Christian Bale (dressed as Batman) told Tim Booth that the song saved his life.
Getting out of work post sunset lends itself to certain kinds of shots. I hope it not getting tired.
A photo that I took in 2016 with a 720nm infrared filter and a Fujifilm X100S. I only now got around to working on a color version of the photo, using the split-tone feature of Lightroom -- producing a much better result than the old BW version, particularly in the depiction of light. Hand-held. The X100S doesn't have an internal IR filter, so it doesn't need conversion for use in IR. Just add an external IR filter.
It's always the same - driving along and the sky is majestic. You know a good place to stop, but it's a few miles yet and the traffic is not in your favour. You can see the oranges turn to blue and that great shot has slipped through your fingers.
This didn't happen to me today ;)
But it nearly did.
(073/365)
Slightly foggy this morning and I was struck by how much this Pine in the back yard looked like a Christmas tree. If I had noticed this sooner, I would have hung some ornaments on it!!
Wishing all a Merry Christmas... :)
HSS
Calliope, but just Callie for short. I decided to make a candid snapshot in the park look a little like a formal portrait.
I converted it to mono, and then added toning to the highlights to somewhat resemble her actual fur colour.
I will post the original version, below, in Comments.
© AnvilcloudPhotography
This man is searching the beach with his metal detector and boy is there a lot of beach at Camber sands
How we see
How we remember
Memories merge and reform
Tantalising glimpses of a half truth
Captured in a moment
Spent yesterday evening crawling around on the ground in the wildflower meadows by the River Swale near Richmond. Field Sorrel and Pignut backlit by the evening sun. Two images layered and blended in Photoshop, split toned in Silver Efex Pro.
Sunset ~ Breakwater Lighthouse ~ Michigan City, Indiana
Nikon D5100, Tamron 18-270, ISO 100, f/10.0, 140mm, 1/1600s
Fall River, Massachusetts
An almost black and white long exposure of a power line tower near South Watuppa Pond (with a small amount of light purple added to the highlights via split toning in Lightroom).
Filters: Gold-N-Blue polarizer, 10-stop ND
The United Kingdom's steepest funicular railway provides access to Hastings Country Park which overlooks the Old Town and Rock-a-Nore. The lift provides views over the Stade, home to the largest beach launched fishing fleet in Europe in existence for over a thousand years
Captured shortly after sunset on a photo walk with like-minded photographers
Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Thank you for your visits and comments.
Compositionally Challenged Week 24 - Vintage
Roger Daltry's second solo studio album
I started out wanting to shoot a turntable with the needle on the record. Steve retrieved our long-unused turntable from the basement, and discovered this album was still on it, lol. But the stylus was missing, and I'm not going to search the basement for it. So I took a shot of the record as it was moving, with the sunlight coming through the golden window blind. In post I cropped and went with a B/W Split Tone. The shadow on the right is from the window frame. : )
It's been a while since I posted a pic with light trails... Or a 'split tones' one for that matter ;o)
Unintential title shift effect on the right due to one of the shots in the panorama being out of focus. Oh well.
On the bonnie bonnie banks and peaceful waters of Loch lomond. Pastel colour split-toning edit in Lightroom…
All rights reserved - © Moraypix Photography
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Posed street portrait taken for my 100 Strangers project and revisited with new editing techniques. Primary editing was done in Lightroom and I exported to Photoshop for some extensive frequency separation work and a subtle addition of split tone processing. Enjoy!
Number 300 of my 365 photo challenge - A split-toned, focus stacked, macro image of some very aged Pinwheel mushrooms growing low down in the forest floor.
I know I have done similar shots like this already but this stack was a particular challenge and I feel that the result is one of my best focus stacks to date. There are still some mistakes in the image and any advice on how to alter subtle details in Photoshop's auto blend would be most appreciated.
At number 300, I can really see the light at the end of the tunnel with regard to the challenge! :-)
Leiden, the Netherlands. Cronestein Park.
Summicron 35mm
Take the time to view this one in large and BlackMagic
Thanks for all the visits, comments and invites, much appriciated!!!
Have all a wonderful and creativ week ahead:-)