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How is this done
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Jun 2, 2015 16:01:23   #
Canon1111
 
This is not my photo, but would really like to know how this was done,


(Download)

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Jun 2, 2015 16:13:29   #
hlmichel Loc: New Hope, Minnesota
 
Looks like they chopped the image into slices and added a color cast to each slice. Also looks like they messed with the order of the layers.

I'd make a thin selection and "create new layer via cut" Go back to the original layer and repeat until each slice is on a new layer. I think there may be a tool in PS for doing that though.

For me, it is an interesting effect, but they went too far when they scrambled the layer order.

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Jun 2, 2015 16:27:46   #
Didereaux Loc: Swamps of E TX
 
Well one way in PS is to make a dupe layer. Then to make your 'slice' rectangle. Then cut that area, and repaste. At that time change the color/tint of that slice. re-select the dupe layer move the rectangle to the right so that the new slice just touches the left edge of the remaining part of the dupe, and repeat the cut/paste/tint. To get the staggered look you re-sect each slices layer, and slide it up or down to your taste. When you have finished cutting and pasting all the slices then you merge visible, and crop off the uneven tops and bottoms. You can also slide the slices horizontally and change places with each of them. Takes longer to explain than do.

and you can forst build a complete composite before doing that, to make it look like the one posted such that the clouds appear as from different pictures(which they technically are).

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Jun 2, 2015 16:39:27   #
Big Stopper Loc: London
 
It's actually the same shot taken at different times of the day. The shots are not random at all but I'd guess as there are 16 shots they were taken at one hour intervals. The trees in the foreground all align.

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Jun 2, 2015 16:47:29   #
Didereaux Loc: Swamps of E TX
 
Luggerbugs wrote:
It's actually the same shot taken at different times of the day. The shots are not random at all but I'd guess as there are 16 shots they were taken at one hour intervals. The trees in the foreground all align.


Alignment of the trees is no problem. In fact as I implied above you could do all the slices, merge then bring in a silhouetted horizon and past that layer right over it. Different times of day works, but you then take a slice from each photo and paste into a new one, but that would be a lot of time spent for no better results I think.

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Jun 2, 2015 16:55:21   #
hlmichel Loc: New Hope, Minnesota
 
Luggerbugs wrote:
It's actually the same shot taken at different times of the day. The shots are not random at all but I'd guess as there are 16 shots they were taken at one hour intervals. The trees in the foreground all align.


Now I feel like a dope. Of course it's the same shot at different times.

This is one case, IMHO, where photoshop magic would have looked better. The clouds not lining up bugs me.

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Jun 3, 2015 02:02:51   #
St3v3M Loc: 35,000 feet
 
Canon1111 wrote:
This is not my photo, but would really like to know how this was done,

How Do You Make a Time Slice Photo?
http://www.picturecorrect.com/tips/how-do-you-make-a-time-slice-photo

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Jun 3, 2015 05:51:19   #
Gene51 Loc: Yonkers, NY, now in LSD (LowerSlowerDelaware)
 
Canon1111 wrote:
This is not my photo, but would really like to know how this was done,


It looks to me like it is a single shot. The sky was masked and cut into slices, and each adjoining slice was vertically offset. Finally the entire resulting sky was moved down below the treeline to take care of the ragged edges at the bottom of the sky, and it was cropped at the top to remove the ragged edges at the top.

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Jun 3, 2015 06:09:51   #
Bobbee
 
Canon1111 wrote:
This is not my photo, but would really like to know how this was done,


I copied you r picture out and did a Google search on it. It is interesting the amount of hits I got on that single photo.

http://imgur.com/gallery/2Z0i4tW

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Jun 3, 2015 06:20:53   #
CO
 
I sometimes create a diptych or triptych in Photoshop. I wonder if the sky was created the same way except with sixteen segments instead of two or three.

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Jun 3, 2015 06:42:16   #
Shoeless_Photographer Loc: Lexington
 
Luggerbugs wrote:
It's actually the same shot taken at different times of the day. The shots are not random at all but I'd guess as there are 16 shots they were taken at one hour intervals. The trees in the foreground all align.



It can't be one-hour intervals because the right nine shots all have the same contrails. Those won't last nine hours.

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Jun 3, 2015 07:32:16   #
jerryc41 Loc: Catskill Mts of NY
 
Canon1111 wrote:
This is not my photo, but would really like to know how this was done,

I just saw an article about how to do that. If only I could find it. Let me check.

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Jun 3, 2015 07:39:00   #
jerryc41 Loc: Catskill Mts of NY
 
Canon1111 wrote:
This is not my photo, but would really like to know how this was done,

A couple of links -
http://graphicdesign.stackexchange.com/questions/7480/how-to-cut-a-large-photo-into-a-grid-of-smaller-photos-automatically-in-photosho

http://www.photoshop911.com/tutorials/photo_collage_2.html

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Jun 3, 2015 07:54:25   #
Reinaldokool Loc: San Rafael, CA
 
Luggerbugs wrote:
It's actually the same shot taken at different times of the day. The shots are not random at all but I'd guess as there are 16 shots they were taken at one hour intervals. The trees in the foreground all align.


:thumbup: :thumbup:

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Jun 3, 2015 08:33:41   #
jerryc41 Loc: Catskill Mts of NY
 
St3v3M wrote:

Yes, that's the article I saw. Thanks!

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