Thanks for sharing your process.
Another amazing display. Thank you for the tutorial although, in all honesty, it is nothing I will ever try--my patience level is much too low.
I'm not sure how to word this but I'll try. In this case you started with a B&W image that looks like a porcelain doll and ended up with an image that looks like a porcelain doll, only in color. Do you ever have the urge to humanize them? Add a blemish or pores on the nose, maybe a dirty spot on a shirt. This is not intended as a criticism only a question.
Jack
I think you succeeded in this because you achieve subtle nuance (maybe a redundant term).
Thanks so much for the steps you used. The result is just amazing. Bev
Well done. Thanks for your contributions. . . .
AzPicLady wrote:
This is a lovely portrait. Was it originally captured in colour, then converted to B&W, or originally in B&W?
I got this photo as a B&W from another site I belong to
Curmudgeon wrote:
Another amazing display. Thank you for the tutorial although, in all honesty, it is nothing I will ever try--my patience level is much too low.
I'm not sure how to word this but I'll try. In this case you started with a B&W image that looks like a porcelain doll and ended up with an image that looks like a porcelain doll, only in color. Do you ever have the urge to humanize them? Add a blemish or pores on the nose, maybe a dirty spot on a shirt. This is not intended as a criticism only a question.
Jack
Another amazing display. Thank you for the tutoria... (
show quote)
The person who posted this photo on the other site I belong to of the B&W and his colored copy uses photos of people . I work with what I get from any site I download from where I can use the photo freely as he granted me .
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