![]() ![]() Pare down your categories since you don’t have enough images to fill each. Now let’s take a look at a viewer’s portfolio! Great images, great layout. Bacalhau. “You just offended all of Portugal” ![]() What was the best food T&C had in Portugal? A sandwich with cheese on top soaked in gravy.Cheap LEDs blink on and off constantly, so it doesn’t give you consistent light. Why does the camera not like LED? We get that answered by a viewer later.“Come on guys, you gotta keep up with my mom.” Nikon D500 is here! Might be the best camera of the year.grainery “You know what would have been great? If they’d light painted a chicken.Tron mask/light babe “when you find a woman like that, you keep her”.“you just said Greg is cooler?” “the cool judge”.don’t start a fire, don’t burn down boats.“Tony Northrup, who pronounces it “Porsh” like an animal” Ok, we get into your photos here, these are our faves: And a bunch that were in tunnels.Ĭlick this for joy. Hey there! This week we looked at your light painting photos and we got some good ones. I thought these were really fun to shoot and I look forward to trying it again, a bit more intentionally next time. In the last shot however, I adjusted the white balance to make the yellow lights more blue and thought the abstract look of the whole thing was beautiful. The colors in the shots weren’t very pleasing and didn’t add anything to them. The first two images I converted to black and white in Lightroom and adjusted the exposure. Others, I chose to pivot myself while the shutter was open to create light trails. The ones I liked the best had the eerie ghosting of the kids moving through the frame around the light. So all it took to capture these photos was some experimenting with the shutter speed. I took some of just the firecrackers burning, but I didn’t find those too compelling. I think my kids would love to try those as well, so maybe we’ll attempt them in the future. Those are a bit more complex and you can learn multiple ways to do it from Tony’s video here: These wound up being abstracts, which I love, not the intentional kind of light painting that you generally see. I thought it would be a great time to try out some impromptu light painting. But a month or so back we had a party for my stepson’s birthday and our friends brought sparklers. This week’s live show topic is long exposures, which I really hadn’t attempted before. Existing members can login here to access this tutorial.Happy Spring for those of you in this part of the world! It doesn’t feel like it yet, but I can’t wait for it to get warmer and drier so I am motivated to get out and shoot more.Join our FanExtra members community to access this full tutorial.When you’re done the result should be like this. No start painting with black color the edge of the cliff like this ![]() Set as foreground color black and background color as white, default (d,x). Select the mask of the “main Cliff” layer. Like this :Ĭhoose the brush tool (B) right click and set a brush size of 35 px and hardness 70%. Great! Now position the image of the cliff on the right corner at the bottom. Now drag the image of the cliff into our Photoshop project. Make sure you have selected the move tool (v) and the layer of the cliff selected as well. Now let’s place the image of the cliff into our Photoshop project while keeping the mask. After you do that go to image -> image rotation -> Flip canvas horizontal. This will select everything but the cliff. Wile the selection is still on, right click on the mouse and select inverse. Now put the parameters like this: View -> overlay, radius -> 0,0 px, Smooth -> 4 px, Feather -> 1,2 px, Contrast 0%, Shift Edge 57%. While having the magic wand selected, right click on the mouse and select “refine edge”. Now hold down the shift key on the keyboard and select all the unselected areas.Ĭlick until all the areas of image are selected except for the cliff. Now name the layer Main cliff and click OK, this will unlock the layer.Ĭhoose the magic wand tool and make one click on the sky as shown in the picture: Now go to the layers palette and double click on the layer “background”. Choose File -> open -> and select the image. Then go to filter -> Blur -> Gaussian Blur and add 2,2 to the blur radius. Name the layer as background blur as shown below. Now go to the layers palette and right click on the “background” image and select “duplicate”. Now place the image as shown in the picture below. The image will automatically be inserted to Photoshop as a smart object. Now go to File-> place -> select the image of the valley and click open. Tick also the boxes “constrain proportions” and “resample Image” as shown in the picture below. Go to file -> New and put width: 1920 pixels.
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