Monday, February 28, 2011
Friday, February 25, 2011
A Distance I Have Wandered
Another (barely) faux-HDR I did, mostly because I really wanted to preserve the radiance around the creek as well as the red lens flare on the lower left border.
Posted by
Emma
at
10:52 AM
A Distance I Have Wandered
2011-02-25T10:52:00-06:00
Emma
landscape|nature|North woods|
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Labels:
landscape,
nature,
North woods
Thursday, February 24, 2011
Seem to Grin
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
Softer than a Chime
Asparagus foliage in the autumn.
In processing this one, I loved the vibrancy of the yellow and the deep blue of the sky behind it, but it still looked dimensionally flat. It needed something to help it "pop." So I employed a technique known as "boom vignetting" in the digital world--something many high school photography students are probably familiar with (though it's much easier to do digitally). In the darkroom, students like myself in our
Using a cartoon-ish "explosion" shape in photoshop (or really any interesting shape/brush), you simply cut the shape out of a layer copy of the base image, use Gaussian Blur on that layer, select layer mode to "multiply," and scale back the opacity as needed. The result is a dramatic vignette effect without the obvious "vignette corner" appearance.
Posted by
Emma
at
4:45 PM
Softer than a Chime
2011-02-23T16:45:00-06:00
Emma
nature|North woods|plant|
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Labels:
nature,
North woods,
plant
Monday, February 21, 2011
Solitude, Found
When one finally arrives at
the point where schedules
are forgotten, and becomes immersed
in ancient rhythms,
one begins to live.
-Sigurd Olson
Posted by
Emma
at
10:49 AM
Solitude, Found
2011-02-21T10:49:00-06:00
Emma
landscape|nature|North woods|waterscape|
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Labels:
landscape,
nature,
North woods,
waterscape
Sunday, February 20, 2011
Keebler
Keebler, a pony who joined the stable this last winter. I've had this photo for a while, and just kept forgetting to post it! I really can't get over how perfect the name "Keebler" is for a pony, though.
Labels:
equine,
equine eye,
horse
Friday, February 18, 2011
Silkweed
(Common) Milkweed, also known as silkweed. Milkweed sap can be applied as a remedy for poison ivy or to remove warts, and it was common to use as a clotting agent for small wounds. After being properly cooked, chewing the roots cures dysentery, and infusions of the roots and leaves was used to treat typhus fever, asthma, and to suppress coughs. The floss, which is hypoallergenic, is superior to down feathers when used as insulation. As an added surprise, the floss is evidently six times more buoyant than cork.
There is a section of trail that edges a field and cow pasture before the path retreats again into the woods, and it is home to hundreds of milkweed. When we walked through there in the fall, we caught the majority of the plants at their peak seeding time. Hundreds of seed pods, some not quite open but cracked, others splayed like wounds of fluff, and a few merely empty shells. The way the light hit the silk was simply splendid; I just couldn't stop taking photos.
Labels:
nature,
North woods,
plant
Thursday, February 17, 2011
Now I Wonder
This image was actually taken out the window of the car while we were driving around up north. I had to spend some time removing a few small dirt/dust spots. I focused on bringing out the sky (a little bit of saturation and a boost of highlights and lights with contrast) and as the foreground darkened I knew I wanted it to be a silhouette. A little black clipping and it was already there. A vignette completed the effect which, because of the car window, reminds me a little of a holga or lomo.
Posted by
Emma
at
12:37 PM
Now I Wonder
2011-02-17T12:37:00-06:00
Emma
clouds|silhouette|skyscape|
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Labels:
clouds,
silhouette,
skyscape
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
Never Elsewhere
A faux-HDR image I just finished. In truth, it's hardly HDR if compared to some of the hardcore HDR images out there, but that's just how I like it--grounded and not velveteen.
It came about mostly because I realized tonight that I no longer knew how to create a faux-HDR image myself with my photoshop program. PSE5, which I used to use, is very different from the PSE9 I have now. I'm still sorting everything out. For instance, I just realized that I can now do Photoshop Actions, albeit PSE-friendly ones. More importantly, I can streamline my photo work even more by creating my own Actions. =)
Sunday, February 13, 2011
Lashes
While this image didn't come from the reject pile, I never got around to processing it because I initially thought it was a bit too much on the "alien-looking" side of equine eye shots. But I do love her eyelashes here.
Labels:
equine,
equine eye,
horse
Saturday, February 12, 2011
Foalhood Dreams II
I decided I didn't want to wait to post this one. I used the same unconventional technique on this one as I did on Foalhood Dreams I, and I think it's pretty obvious what a difference it made on this image.
Perhaps it's the sunbeams in front of Andromeda, but the noise reduction here adds an entirely different level of texture. The grass looks more windswept but still have a necessary touch of sharpness, and the trees look like something out of a painting without looking painted themselves. And I still feel that the only real photo-shopping I did on this image was to remove an unsightly fencepost in the background by her nose.
With this image, I feel more like I've taken an unconventional photoshop filter and made it into a workable artistic tool, which is kind of nice.
Foalhood Dreams I
Another photo originally from the reject pile. I cropped it a little bit and decided to leave in the scrawny tall tree on a whim. I still can't decide if it's distracting or simply properly balancing, though.
I processed this one on the under-exposed side of things, dropped saturation level, and boosted the black clipping for a silhouette. A touch of extra brightness to give it that sunlit glow.
And then I did something a little crazy--something I've never done on a photo before. I decided there was too much detail. Too much sharpness. So I used noise reduction technology to give the pixels and the colors some softness while keeping the edges crisp. I'll admit that I *love* the effect of that on the trees, but I'm still trying to decide if I've crossed some invisible line into digital art-photography I'd never intended to cross.
Friday, February 11, 2011
Kelpie
I've been going through a few older equine shoots with the mind to dredge up some of the "cast aways" and give them some life. (Or find gems I'd forgotten about.)
This shot was sorted into the reject pile on several occasions, but when I saw it tonight something in it gripped me. There's a lot wrong with it technically--the blurry focal point (the eye), the extremes between the overly dark throat-latch and the nearly over-exposed face. But all of that did something for me this time. Combined with the color tones in the mare's coat and her liquid-eyed stare I thought immediately of the Kelpie. The black river horse. Mysterious but breathtaking. Her song is quiet but haunting. Irresistible. The lost pony, ever found.
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