@BackdoorHippie, really like these last two shots. Now I almost got sick looking at them, if you have a wheel mouse scroll up and down while looking at these last two. I dont know if you intended to post them in that order or not.
2014-075:
Stepped away from the chess set and into Home Depot.
Closest I've come thus far to getting something to "tile" - and I didn't mean to be punny
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2014-077:
Quick trip to FL to help my Mom out and attend a wedding on the other side of the state. We dropped in to see if the Ft. Myers Bald Eagles were around on our way in from the airport, but the young'un was in the nest and the parents out and about. On my way to the car I thought, "Better squeeze something off, just in case", and I'm glad I did. So, here you have an abysmally composed photo of a Canon shooter with a lot of wildlife gear, with the eagle's nest in the tree in the background. A photo that would never see the light of day if not for this year-long effort.
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And while it wouldn't have counted towards a "photo from March 18", this is one that I did on the plane flying in. Single image, sliced and diced into about 14 layers at one point. So while I didn't "take it" I did "make it" yesterday.
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And for the curious wondering, "14 layers?!", here's the original photo...
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and the process with layer names...
Layer 1 (background) - Background
Layer 2 (new background) - Replicate backround (non-destructive edit), adjust light and use Smart Fill to remove the numbers.
Layer 3 (pure Bishop) - Use the Quick Selection tool to select the Bishop into its own layer
Layer 4 (movement) - Replicate Layer 3 and apply Motion Blur at an angle approximating its move on a diagonal. Reposition so that the movement ends at the bishop.
Layers 5-8 (more movement) - Replicate Layer 4 to intensify the blur (original was very faint). These are eventually combined into a single layer with Layer 4. After Layer 9 is created and the movement layers combined I used the Perspective Correction tool on this layer only to shrink the left side of the blur to match the resized Bishop. I then applied some contrast and brightness adjustments to the movement, and then a bit of Field Blur to soften the lines.
Layer 9 (original Bishop) - Replicate Layer 3. Move to starting square and use Transform to shrink the Bishop to look as if it was moved. Apply field blur to approximate Depth of Field. Layer opacity reduced to around 25%.
Layer 10 (Bishop overlay) - Replicated Layer 3 and reduce opacity to about 11% to enhance the lines of the piece obscured by the blur.
Layer 11-12 (moving Bishop) - Replicate Layer 10 twice and reposition along the path to show moments during movement. I ultimately did not use these.
Layer 13 (flatten composite) - Using Command-Option-Shift E I created a new layer of all the visible portions, which preserved the edits but allows me to apply global changes like vignettes, sharpening, etc.
Layer 14 - Replicate Layer 13, apply High Pass Filter, set the layer blend to Vivid Light, and reduce opacity to sharpen.
And there you have it.As it exists now, there are are only 4 visible layers preserved as edits (the new background, the movement, the original bishop and the bishop overlay), and 2 visible layers hiding that (the flattened composite and the high pass filter). Once complete, I did some minor tonal tweaking in LR before exporting.
2014-078:
Two things I love about visiting Florida (there aren't a ton of them)...
Sunrises...
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This is gorgeous! Is this sunrise a lake or is the water from the ocean?
I think you did a fine job Jake. What was the joke that made them all laugh in the third picture?? Must have been a good one!
2014-078:
Two things I love about visiting Florida (there aren't a ton of them)...
Sunrises...
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...and breakfast at the Go-Go Diner in Ft. Myers
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