View allAll Photos Tagged splittoning
The spider was indefinitely my most admired art in Midburn 2018. It felt like as if it was alive all the time, each day it changed position and lights.
taken for Our Daily Challenge - spooky
I have been watching Mama spider and her spiderlings with interest. I have never seen the spiderlings before.
"... perfectly still and serene, the lake as smooth as glass, we making the only ripple as we paddled into it."
Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862), in "The Maine Woods"
my first attempt at getting a sort of cinematic look with split toning in darktable. I added some vignetting and slight amount of grain.
Wandering through Witcombe Wood a month or so ago, I came across this little sapling apparently overwhelmed by the trees to the right. They seem to be preying on it! This is a small wood of amazing variety and the colours were still fabulous.
This image was inspired by the work of Victor Varsarley. I have a Zebegen print that stares me in the face each time I walk down the stairs to my office. At least once a day I pause at the bottom of the stairs to admire it.
CameraNikon D7000
Exposure 50
Aperture f/14.0
Focal Length 25 mm
ISO Speed 100
B&W 10 stop ND Filter and 2 stop GND
Processed in Adobe RAW and CS5
Boulder strewn passage through the Millstone Grit rock formations at Brimham Rocks, North Yorkshire, England.
Interior of an old mail carriage that was a mobile sorting office on overnight trains. This one is in retirement at the National Railway Museum in York, England. It was fitted with a collection scoop system, enabling pickup of mail bags whilst travelling. Can imagine it would wake up any bleary-eyed postal staff as the bags thudded into the scoop! Converted to mono and then split toned in LR.
Number 245 of my 365 photo challenge - A split-toned, landscape image of a field being harvested in the afternoon light at the end of the season.
"Jetty in bad shape, do not enter"
Last shot of the day, light was already fading, so I managed to get a 30 sec. exposure without any ND filter. As the image was getting a bit flat, I added a split-tone effect to bring out some more contrast and detail. Still trying to get a hang of this whole Lightroom tool box! Constructive comments are always welcome.
Technical details:
Canon 1D-Mark III
Canon EF 17-40L f/4 USM
Filter: non
Exposure: 30 sec.
Diaphram: f/22
ISO: 100
Focal length: 21 mm (APS-H sensor)
Converted to monochrome/ splittone in Lightroom 3.
January 18th. 2011
© text & photos Dutch.Dennis