A new series I've been playing with
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Architecture; A Negative View
Collapse
X
-
Re: Architecture; A Negative View
what interesting shots, I like that. The 2nd is my favorite of the 2. What process are you using to get this:- Ian
5D Mk III, 24-105 / 70-200 f2.8 L / 100-400 Mk II / 100 macro / 16-35 L / 11-24 L / 1.4 & 2x converters and a bad back carrying it all ;o)
:- https://www.flickr.com/photos/fotosespana/
-
Re: Architecture; A Negative View
Thanks Tigger. It's a simple colour inversion and then I've pushed the sharpening beyond what would be reasonable in a positive image, to accentuate the edges and give it the sort of look you might see in an architectural render.
They were both shot after dusk. The first one there was still a little light left in the sky whilst the second one there was no cloud and the sky was pretty dark.Last edited by Jonathan Teatime; 08-02-2018, 23:30.
Comment
-
Re: Architecture; A Negative View
I like the second one. It's different enough without being jarring. The problem I have with the first is that it's not recognisable enough to be able to tell what it is or what's been done. if you see what I mean?EOS 7D mk II, Sigma 150-660C, Canon 17-85 EF-S, Tamron 10-24 and a wife who shares my obsession.
Comment
-
Re: Architecture; A Negative View
Originally posted by Jonathan Teatime View PostThanks Tigger. It's a simple colour inversion and then I've pushed the sharpening beyond what would be reasonable in a positive image, to eventuate the edges and give it the sort of look you might see in an architectural render.
They were both shot after dusk. The first one there was still a little light left in the sky whilst the second one there was no cloud and the sky was pretty dark.:- Ian
5D Mk III, 24-105 / 70-200 f2.8 L / 100-400 Mk II / 100 macro / 16-35 L / 11-24 L / 1.4 & 2x converters and a bad back carrying it all ;o)
:- https://www.flickr.com/photos/fotosespana/
Comment
-
Re: Architecture; A Negative View
Very interesting processing, Jonathan, that suits the very modern curvaceous buildings. Unlike the others I'm going to say I prefer the first though, I think the extra clutter of the second works against it, for me it works better when nearly abstract, and this works best when just simple lines and shapes.Canon EOS 7D
EF-S 10-22mm 1:3.5-4.5 USM, EF 24-105mm 1:4 L IS USM, EF 50mm 1:1.8, EF 70-300mm 1:4-5.6 IS USM
Luminar 4, Aurora HDR Pro, Silver Efex
flickr: http://flic.kr/ps/LXWuy
Comment
-
Re: Architecture; A Negative View
I very much like these, really original processing. The first is truly abstract as you're left working out what its all about. The second is excellent too...but not so abstract in that sense. a whole series would be good to see.Brian Vickers LRPS
brianvickersphotography.com
Comment
Comment