Linda From Maine wrote:
I went to the car wash this morning, planning to take photos through the car windows. To my surprise, I discovered I was already there
I am attaching the two photos used, and asking if anyone has an interest in explaining how they would do this. I kind of muddled through, using two layers of my face with different blend modes, and some erasing of the water drops. I want the scene behind the water drops to be indoors, not outdoors, with the water as "rain." Feel free to use your own interior shot; I had very little to choose from
Your time is much appreciated!
I went to the car wash this morning, planning to t... (
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I like it!!! It sound like an awful lot of work,though
Fran
Ben's nana wrote:
I like it!!! It sound like an awful lot of work,though
Fran
Thanks Fran. It's only work if it's not fun
My result is from just two layers (not counting the original) and one of those was mainly duplicating in a different blend mode. However, as you see with Jim's, the more you pay attention to detail and fine-tune the concept, the more complicated and time-consuming it is.
I tend to not give enough attention to detail, which is why I asked for tips and assistance. Am still in love with Topaz Studio 2 filters, no denying!
Linda From Maine wrote:
I went to the car wash this morning, planning to take photos through the car windows. To my surprise, I discovered I was already there
I am attaching the two photos used, and asking if anyone has an interest in explaining how they would do this. I kind of muddled through, using two layers of my face with different blend modes, and some erasing of the water drops. I want the scene behind the water drops to be indoors, not outdoors, with the water as "rain." Feel free to use your own interior shot; I had very little to choose from
Your time is much appreciated!
I went to the car wash this morning, planning to t... (
show quote)
Linda, great concept. I'm afraid I don't have much of any suggestions, other than (as you know) composites are always a work in progress. Never to be completed while there's always something to add or remove, which makes doing them all the more enjoyable to do IMO. The more we do the better we get ... sometimes !!!
Dave Chinn wrote:
Linda, great concept. I'm afraid I don't have much of any suggestions, other than (as you know) composites are always a work in progress. Never to be completed while there's always something to add or remove, which makes doing them all the more enjoyable to do IMO. The more we do the better we get ... sometimes !!!
Thanks so much for your excellent advice and encouragement, Dave.
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