ustein
Contributing Editor
Speechless: Wow.This is called:
"Where to now, Alice?"
Keith
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Speechless: Wow.This is called:
"Where to now, Alice?"
Keith
This is a real wonderful image Keith. Prefer it above the blended version also because of the framing you used. The touch of HDR works great.Thanks Leica and Raf
This one starts with one of my own personal favorite images, and (although I don't do this often,) here is the original.
In the previous post I put a texture on it to get it up here again (it's posted somewhere else) - and the texture just extends the Galaxy across the whole image (and adds a lot of noise :cussing
Regards
Keith
+1. I love the Galaxy painted on the brick wall! All the best, Leica 77.This is a real wonderful image Keith. Prefer it above the blended version also because of the framing you used. The touch of HDR works great.
Love it.
Michiel
No HDR in the orginal image, Michael. This was done in the days when I did not know what HDR was.This is a real wonderful image Keith. Prefer it above the blended version also because of the framing you used. The touch of HDR works great.
Love it.
Michiel
Hi Keith,This is called:
"Hello Mary Loo"
Keith
Looks like they both work. Very nice images.This thread has inspired me to try blends, something I'd never really considered before. Following are my first attempts. I'm trying to illustrate a Venetian canal transforming into a forest (inspired by a scene in my favorite book). Do either of them work? Any comments or suggestions?
I was randomly trying a variety of blending modes. Does anyone know of any good web tutorial on blending?
Lisa
They are both good blends IMO. The second one I would say is more suited to what you're after though.I'm trying to illustrate a Venetian canal transforming into a forest (inspired by a scene in my favorite book). Do either of them work?
Portrait of Andrea.
I like these last two.Accordion Man