View allAll Photos Tagged splittoning
Low tide at Teignmouth reveals the sandbanks responsible for breaking the waves when the tide is in... A wonderful place to walk that gives you that open-space feeling that isn't there during high tide when the beach is much smaller.
Spent some time on sunday on the Number 11 Bus Route in Birmingham - 26 miles round the "Outer Circle" taking shots from the top deck..
White Columbine (Aquilegia).
I thought I would provide some refuge for my viewer who tires rather of my Sunday chromatic manglings here is a straightforward monochrome version of the Colours of White.
First it was converted using Nik Silver Efex and then slightly tinted using Split Toning in Affinity Photo which gives a subtle warmth to the image (I used red and yellow I think for the split tone).
Thank you for taking the time to look. I hope you enjoy the image :)
Bewdley, Severnside North bathed in full sunlight
Copyright © 2014 Duncan Lee, picsfolio.co.uk - All rights reserved. Any downloading, copying, reproduction or distribution of this image is strictly forbidden without the creator's express written permission.
This is an alternative shot to this one
Camera info:
Nikon D700 | Nikkor 85mm F/1.4D @f/1.4 | ISO100 | 1/2500sec
Previous from the project:
This time I was able to split tone an image, unlike yesterday's gorgeously coloured Irish Wolfhound, who didn't look right with his colours changed.
After shopping at the pharmacy, Tesco's just for cat food, the farm shop and the butchers, I was ready for a bit of me-time.
I drove to this lovely Saxon church, planning a few photos then maybe a walk. It started raining as the photography was finishing, so I went home. The sun has now come out :-/
Converted to mono, then given a classic blue-orange split tone in the new LR colour grading panel.
Number 329 of my 365 photo challenge - A split-toned, focus, stacked, macro image of some tiny flower buds, hanging on for dear life in the colder weather.
To mark the 40th anniversary of the last cargo ship leaving Bristol City Docks, a series of re-enactments and tours were organised.
Nowadays increasingly referred to as Harbourside, the docks based in the Floating Harbour were the centre of Bristol’s trade for centuries. Eclipsed after the 1920s by Avonmouth Docks, the City Docks were gradually run down during the late 1960s for planned closure to commercial shipping in April 1975. The last regular trading ship left Princes Wharf in November 1974
I took this picture at Skinningrove because of the almost metallic sheen of the water under the light of the unusual, cloudy but bright sky. The light on the rocks had a high dynamic range that made them stand out, whereas the sea, cliffs, and billowing sky lended themselves to a touch of post-processing, mainly contrast and mid-tone adjustment. I've not seen a sky like this since.
A revisit to a previous image using a split-toning technique.
If you want to see how I did this visit 19sixty3.co.uk/2011/03/split-toning-using-curves-in-photo...
EXPLORED - 2nd day on the run!
COPYRIGHT © David F. Panno - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED - Content is not to be redistributed, shared or modified.
20130601_012_Litchfield_LR6COPY-2.TIF
A fun experiment in dramatic use of split toning. I wanted to create an image that was both enticingly surreal and viscerally intimidating. The photo's perspective is designed to create a feeling of smallness and a sense of the pyramid's power. The dramatic and candy-like colours and enhanced textures of the clouds are meant to give the photo a dream-like, almost whimsical, feel. Together they create a conflicting emotional response.
Any feedback or your own interpretation of the image would be greatly appreciated!
Peasant girl at the gates of a ruined abbey. Greyabbey, Northern Ireland. Split-toned copy of an original print; originally taken with Canon SLR film camera.
© 2011 Thousand Word Images by Dustin Abbott
My sunglasses laying on a rattan beach chair next to the Caribbean. I had noticed several times the killer reflections in them, but early on my last morning the sun was in the perfect position for a nice reflected flare with the sweep of the Caribbean beyond. I had to really fight the glare in PP, but the am pleased with the final image. Puerto Morelos, Mexico - Mexican Caribbean.
© 2011 Thousand Word Images by Dustin Abbott
Interior shot of an abandoned 1964 Ford Fairlane 500. I had originally processed this image in a creamtone monochromatic finish, but a friend was interested in matching prints for his office. I went back to the image and retoned it (layered virtual copies) to give it a feel of the times. I thought I would share the end result with you all...