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WEEK 11 Technical: Split Tone
Split Tone is an editing technique where the shadows are toned one color, and the highlights a second color. Split toning is often used with color grading in the media to give a scene a desired look and feel. #dogwood52 #dogwood2017 #dogwoodweek11 #splittone
Una altra foto de la darrera sessió a l'AFE.
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Another photo from the last session at AFE.
Model: Cisco
See where this picture was taken. [?]
This image was featured here:
Yet another mucky day weatherwise so thought I'd play around a bit with split toning from a monochrome starting point. Quite like the effect so may do some more one day,
Some dear friends of mine. I really feel like this image celebrates love and the calm soft moments it fosters.
Strobist: SB-80DX bounce into umbrella above center.
Nikon D90 | Nikkor 50mm f/1.4 D | 1/200 sec | f/2 | ISO 200
I like the way branches were growing to the sky. Took the shot , but it was a sunny afternoon. I didnt liked the SOC. Then played with black and white conversion, split toning and basic dodge & burn in lightroom.
Nikon D7000 / Tamron AF 70-300MM F/4-5.6 LD Macro Lens / Adobe PS Lightroom 4
He is afraid. He is alone. He is three million light years from home.
-- E.T. (1982) tagline
Meet Astove. He's the oldest resident of the Singapore Zoological Gardens. He's greedy, friendly and resembles E.T. :3
Lens courtesy of [ kai wen ], an awesome new friend and photog I picked up at my faculty's camp. /waves
Dunwich was the capital of East Anglia 1,500 years ago, and was once a prosperous seaport and centre of the wool trade during the early Middle Ages, with a natural harbour formed by the mouths of the River Blyth and the River Dunwich, most of which has since been lost to erosion. Its decline began in 1286 when a sea surge hit the East Anglian coast and it was eventually reduced through coastal erosion to the village it is today.
The Domesday Book of 1086 describes it as possessing three churches. The historian and diver Stuart Bacon, who has made several visits to the seabed in a bid to find the remains of the old town, has found evidence that it may have possessed up to 18 churches and chapels at the height of its fortune during the 12th and 13th centuries.
A departure from my usual street shots. I thought I'd do some close in detailed work. Taken at the National Mining Museum the plates indicate the locker numbers.
I added some split toning just to add a bit more interest.
Arriving at the lake for a couple of days, we unpacked while thunderstorms just missed us. I had to take pictures of the amazing clouds, of course.
Please also visit:
On the east bank of the Río de la Plata, 180km west of Montevideo, but only 50km from Buenos Aires by ferry, Colonia is an irresistibly picturesque town enshrined as a Unesco World Heritage site. Its Barrio Histórico, an irregular colonial-era nucleus of narrow cobbled streets, occupies a small peninsula jutting into the river. Pretty rows of sycamores offer protection from the summer heat, and the riverfront provides a venue for spectacular sunsets. Colonia’s charm and its proximity to Buenos Aires draw thousands of Argentine visitors; on weekends, especially in summer, prices rise and it can be difficult to find a room.
Colonia was founded in 1680 by Manuel Lobo, the Portuguese governor of Rio de Janeiro, and occupied a strategic position almost exactly opposite Buenos Aires across the Río de la Plata. The town grew in importance as a source of smuggled trade items, undercutting Spain’s jealously defended mercantile monopoly and provoking repeated sieges and battles between Spain and Portugal.
Although the two powers agreed over the cession of Colonia to Spain around 1750, it wasn’t until 1777 that Spain took final control of the city. From this time, the city’s commercial importance declined as foreign goods proceeded directly to Buenos Aires (website lonely planet).
Thanks for taking the time to have a look. Please feel free to leave comments and feedback. To see more images check out my web site www.daviddahlenburg.com
Middle House Farm and Great Close from Street Gate by Malham Tarn. Taken with my Pentax K1, RAW processed in Affinity. Split tone and a little noise added
While clearing out my hard drive, I stumbled on some old shots I took while in Jersey. As this was my pal’s stag weekend, I’m surprised that 1) I had time to take some photos and 2) I was sober/un-hungover enough to take them.
Anyway, here is the first, with a hint of Photoshop sliding for good measure.
The Golden Jubilee Needle in St Helier, Jersey is a monument made from Burlington stone, in four different shades and in 400 separate disk-shaped pieces.
Equipment: Canon PowerShot S100 @5.2mm. ISO 80, F8, 1/1250sec
Post production: Curves adjusted (and masked) to control exposure and contrast. Converted to B&W. Split tone effect added. Sharpened.
Another shot of Battersea power station from across the river.
Similar processing to the last one... I think I prefer it to the colour version (which I may post at some point!)
I just reworked this shot I took in late November of "Metlako Falls" on Eagle Creek in the Columbia River Gorge. I had a good black and white version of this but I felt compelled to rework the image and express the vision I had when taken this shot. This shot will be one of my big prints hanging in the Sidecar 11 during the month of April and May. The party for my art showcase is on Thursday April 12th at 7pm at the Sidecar 11 on Mississippi Ave, Portland Oregon.
OK, tried some new stuff with this one. This is an HDR, first time using Photomatix. Now, from the few HDRs I've done that I've been serious about, I'm liking different qualities about them than most people. What I got out of this was increased contrast, and sharpness (you can still see the texture on the shiny rails). I'm also finding much better color saturation (in color images, of course). Forget the current style of flat, cartoonish images with halos all over the place. HDR is going to be October's project (All are invited to join me!)
Nikon D90, RAW, D2X Mode 3 Camera Profile
Sigma 12-24 @ 12mm
ISO 250, hyperfocaled f13 bracketed at 1/5, 1/20, 1/80
HDR via Photomatix saved as TIFF, modified in Camera RAW
Very small crop, white balance, tone curves, black levels, clarity, split-toning
Oh, almost forgot. Didn't feel like cloning due to laziness...if you happen to notice.