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Wild colors! Show us what you've got!


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8 replies to this topic

#1
alden

alden

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I sometimes like to play with the colors and textures in post-processing to see what kind of psychedelic world I can create. If you ever do this, show us some of yours. Here are some of mine.

 

DSC_2122-cp-XL.jpg

 

DSC_1391-%20cp-XL.jpg

 

DSC_2099-pe-XL.jpg

 

DSC_2012-XL.jpg

 

046-3-X2.jpg

 

weird%20aldi-XL.jpg

 

DSC_1903-v2-L.jpg

 

DSC_2087-%20coloredpencil-XL.jpg

 

DSC_3960-3-X3.jpg

 

DSC_4296-2-XL.jpg



#2
Jerry_

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Here is one of mine

a6396c73503df663f5c060572b226aca.jpg

Photo processed with PhotoViva on iPad

And another one, on colors

e3fc7c8bfdb6ddba161165bb7dc865ff.jpg

Photo processed with Painteresque on iPad

#3
alden

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Here is one of mine

a6396c73503df663f5c060572b226aca.jpg

Photo processed with PhotoViva on iPad

And another one, on colors

e3fc7c8bfdb6ddba161165bb7dc865ff.jpg

Photo processed with Painteresque on iPad

 

I like both of these, a lot!



#4
Brian

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Color Infrared: Orange filter to block blue, blue channel gets IR only. Equalize Blue channel to red and green, swap blue and red channel. Using FORTRAN.

 

17021713026_c6a2080872_b.jpgI1016013 by fiftyonepointsix, on Flickr

 

17032220782_d496a6e4b3_b.jpgI1015954 by fiftyonepointsix, on Flickr


16636025039_a154a1e8c7_b.jpgFRACTAL by fiftyonepointsix, on Flickr

 

For the Math Geeks.

 

values from each 2x2 pixel of the Bayer call converted to a complex number and used as input for the Mandelbrot equation. FORTRAN code that was mostly written over 30 years ago, modified to read DNG files.


This is data lost from the compression scheme used by the Leica M8.

 

16600980800_c87293815f_o.jpgL439DFSC by fiftyonepointsix, on Flickr

 

Camera set to a "RAW" mode using a hidden command, then ran the true-raw data through the compression algorithm. Subtract the two, boost the remainder- 

 

And why I never use lossy compression. Same FORTRAN code, different subroutine. 



#5
alden

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Love the infrared daffodils.

 

Not sure what all the programmer lingo means, but I like the others too!



#6
Brian

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This computer lingo means I'm old. We saw "Hidden Figures" this weekend. The part where they read from the FORTRAN manual brought tears to my eyes. I have the FORTRAN manual from the computer that they used in the movie, one of my first jobs was converting software written for that machine, and its predecessor. Been using it daily for 40 years. Wrote my first image processing routine in 1979.

 

Took my daughter and a friend skating yesterday.

 

The other way to get wild colors. Straight exports to JPEG from LR6.8.

 

Nikkor 8.5cm F2 on the Leica M9, wide-open 1/45th second, ISO2500.

 

32586523176_9f6b849a3f_o.jpgSkate and Fun Zone by fiftyonepointsix, on Flickr

 

32504308591_8af6f7c803_o.jpgSkate and Fun Zone by fiftyonepointsix, on Flickr

 

Nikkor 8.5cm F2 on the Leica M9, wide-open 1/30th second, ISO2500.

 

32586523296_4b50cb7ae7_o.jpgSkate and Fun Zone by fiftyonepointsix, on Flickr

 

 

This lens is 60 years old.

 

The movie also had a guy using a Nikon F Photomic, I believe a "Bullseye" which would have been correct for the period. They only showed the side of the camera, so if it had a TTL meter on it, someone knew not to show the front.


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#7
cooltouch

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I was playing around with some old slides of mine and came up with some interesting images.

 

taiwan_temple_1a.jpg

 

f4u_corsair_at_sunset_hdr_1a.jpg

 

baishin_griffith_park_surrealistic_low_c

 

country_scenic_sunset_hdr_1a.jpg



#8
JEcasa

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283cb9a27b0f7f3b8c728083b99e9293.jpg


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk

#9
alden

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Beautiful colors in the cloud cover.

 

283cb9a27b0f7f3b8c728083b99e9293.jpg

 

That is what a lot of sunsets here actually look like all the time.


baishin_griffith_park_surrealistic_low_c

 

​I love this one particularly. It looks like a scene from a dream sequence in a movie.