Saturday, December 22, 2012
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Long Exposures In the Middle of Nowhere.
The farther north you go from MKE, the more amazing the sky looks. My Powershot s95 is hardly capable of doing this sky proper justice.
Labels:
photography,
Photoshop,
U.P.
Saturday, December 15, 2012
I downloaded a little sketch from my mind.
Some Adventure Time sketches I did last night. I've done a lot of work in digital media and I often miss the tactile bliss resulting from graphite on paper. I simply don't make enough time to create in an analog format.
Labels:
Adventure Time,
Sketch
Saturday, October 27, 2012
Senior Picture Project 2012: Part 2
Photos capture by Annette Jarnig.
The purpose of this project is to hook up some Highschool seniors with quality pictures that their families wouldn't have been able to afford otherwise. It has become a goofy standard in American culture to spend hundreds to thousands of hard earned dollars on Senior pictures. Not everyone can pull this off, but everyone deserves to have amazing pictures to be able to swap with the kids they have spent their entire educational career growing up along side.
Click to here to see Part 1.
Shown below, the final product. Mouse over the image to see the before (may take a moment to load).
The purpose of this project is to hook up some Highschool seniors with quality pictures that their families wouldn't have been able to afford otherwise. It has become a goofy standard in American culture to spend hundreds to thousands of hard earned dollars on Senior pictures. Not everyone can pull this off, but everyone deserves to have amazing pictures to be able to swap with the kids they have spent their entire educational career growing up along side.
Click to here to see Part 1.
Shown below, the final product. Mouse over the image to see the before (may take a moment to load).
Senior Picture Project 2012: Part 2
Photos capture by Annette Jarnig.
The purpose of this project is to hook up some Highschool seniors with quality pictures that their families wouldn't have been able to afford otherwise. It has become a goofy standard in American culture to spend hundreds to thousands of hard earned dollars on Senior pictures. Not everyone can pull this off, but everyone deserves to have amazing pictures to be able to swap with the kids they have spent their entire educational career growing up along side.
Click to here to see Part 1.
Shown below, the final product. Mouse over the image to see the before (may take a moment to load).
The purpose of this project is to hook up some Highschool seniors with quality pictures that their families wouldn't have been able to afford otherwise. It has become a goofy standard in American culture to spend hundreds to thousands of hard earned dollars on Senior pictures. Not everyone can pull this off, but everyone deserves to have amazing pictures to be able to swap with the kids they have spent their entire educational career growing up along side.
Click to here to see Part 1.
Shown below, the final product. Mouse over the image to see the before (may take a moment to load).
Sunday, October 21, 2012
Senior Picture Project 2012: Part 1
Photos capture by Annette Jarnig.
The purpose of this project is to hook up some Highschool seniors with quality pictures that their families wouldn't have been able to afford otherwise. It has become a goofy standard in American culture to spend hundreds to thousands of hard earned dollars on Senior pictures. Not everyone can pull this off, but everyone deserves to have amazing pictures to be able to swap with the kids they have spent their entire educational career growing up along side.
Shown below, the final product. Mouse over the image to see the before (may take a moment to load).
The purpose of this project is to hook up some Highschool seniors with quality pictures that their families wouldn't have been able to afford otherwise. It has become a goofy standard in American culture to spend hundreds to thousands of hard earned dollars on Senior pictures. Not everyone can pull this off, but everyone deserves to have amazing pictures to be able to swap with the kids they have spent their entire educational career growing up along side.
Shown below, the final product. Mouse over the image to see the before (may take a moment to load).
Saturday, October 13, 2012
Sunday, October 7, 2012
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Sunday, September 9, 2012
Saturday, September 8, 2012
Thursday, September 6, 2012
Monday, September 3, 2012
Monday, August 27, 2012
Monday, August 20, 2012
Cosplay Bonanza: Memory Versus Reality
The beauty of photoshoppery is the ability to make a digitally captured moment look exactly how you remember it, make the colors and mood just as vivid as it actually seemed. Digital devices lack the ability to truly capture what the human eye does let alone capture the awe of the moment. Here is a more in depth view of one of the shots pictured from last weeks post as I remember it versus how the moment actually captured.
[mouse over to see original capture]
Hardest part about shooting at a convention is that there are tons of people that get in the way and the back drop is a convention center... which is about the dullest backdrop possible. A plethora of wall mounted visual distractions and photo bombers. Two big background distractions that I was oblivious to when I snapped this shot was the mildly disgruntled man sitting up against the wall and the gray wall panel.
Of these Mass Effect cosplayers, the girl in blue on the right was the most impressive. The costume is well done, tons of amazing detail. When I looked at the original in detail after getting home from the convention, I noticed some things (aside from the background distractions) that detracted from my memory of the moment. The girl after a long day at the con had some of her makeup beginning to wear off, the headpiece was starting to come a bit undone, and her bra was sticking out a bit. This is the reality of the moment, but wasn't true to my memory and initial impression of the moment. A true naturalist would have left it as it was and could even argue that by "fixing it" I destroyed the original integrity of the moment... Ultimately, I can live with this since I was able to recapture the moment as I remembered it.
[mouse over to see original capture]
Hardest part about shooting at a convention is that there are tons of people that get in the way and the back drop is a convention center... which is about the dullest backdrop possible. A plethora of wall mounted visual distractions and photo bombers. Two big background distractions that I was oblivious to when I snapped this shot was the mildly disgruntled man sitting up against the wall and the gray wall panel.
Of these Mass Effect cosplayers, the girl in blue on the right was the most impressive. The costume is well done, tons of amazing detail. When I looked at the original in detail after getting home from the convention, I noticed some things (aside from the background distractions) that detracted from my memory of the moment. The girl after a long day at the con had some of her makeup beginning to wear off, the headpiece was starting to come a bit undone, and her bra was sticking out a bit. This is the reality of the moment, but wasn't true to my memory and initial impression of the moment. A true naturalist would have left it as it was and could even argue that by "fixing it" I destroyed the original integrity of the moment... Ultimately, I can live with this since I was able to recapture the moment as I remembered it.
Labels:
GenCon,
Mass Effect,
photo retouching,
photography,
Photoshop,
pixel bending
Sunday, August 12, 2012
Cosplay Bonanza!
Any convention with cosplayers is an opportunity for guerilla photography. Tons of people running around in carefully crafted costumes that are anxious to show them off. If you are holding a camera all you need to do is make eye contact and they stop and pose. With GenCon 2012 right around the corner, I've been looking back on some of the shots I got last year..
One big issue I've had in the past was with there being multiple visual points of distraction that wound up in each shot. Still being quite the photography noob at this point (2011), my focus was just getting a good shot and not considering techniques I could have used to put more focus on my subject. So, I cleaned up in post. Even with all of the best intentions, a shot can still turn out less than ideal due to people getting in the way. Next post, I'll go into some detail on how I corrected some of these distractions and what my approach was. For now, enjoy a smattering of my favorite shots from GenCon 2011:
One big issue I've had in the past was with there being multiple visual points of distraction that wound up in each shot. Still being quite the photography noob at this point (2011), my focus was just getting a good shot and not considering techniques I could have used to put more focus on my subject. So, I cleaned up in post. Even with all of the best intentions, a shot can still turn out less than ideal due to people getting in the way. Next post, I'll go into some detail on how I corrected some of these distractions and what my approach was. For now, enjoy a smattering of my favorite shots from GenCon 2011:
Labels:
GenCon,
photo retouching,
photography,
Photoshop,
pixel bending
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