About Me

My photo
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
"To take a photograph is to align the head, the eye and the heart. It's a way of life." ~ Henri Cartier-Bresson
Showing posts with label Photoshop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photoshop. Show all posts

Thursday, January 14, 2016

2 for 1 Celebrity Portraits by Photoshop Artist Gesichtermix

Impressive... and sometimes freaky results from these celebrity mash-ups by Gesichtermix. Try and guess who the celebrities are before you look at the description below each photo.


Leonardo DiCaprio / Sean Penn

Jennifer Lawrence / Claire Danes
 
Arnold Schwarzenegger / Sylvester Stallone


Natalie Portman / Scarlett Johansson

Ewan McGregor / Colin Firth


Jennifer Lopez / Halle Berry


Robert de Niro / Kevin Spacey


Emily Blunt / Christina Ricci


Pharrell Williams / Channing Tatum


Rihanna / Katy Perry


Ben Affleck / Daniel Day-Lewis


Charlie Sheen / Ashton Kutcher
 
Steven Spielberg / Woody Allen


Robin Williams / Brendan Fraser


Shaquille O'Neal / 50 Cent

Monday, August 26, 2013

Faking It ~ Manipulated Photography Before Photoshop

While digital photography and image-editing software have brought about an increased awareness of the degree to which camera images can be manipulated, the practice of doctoring photographs has existed since the medium was invented. Faking It: Manipulated Photography Before Photoshop at The Metropolitan Museum of Art was the first major exhibition devoted to the history of manipulated photography before the digital age. Featuring some 200 visually captivating photographs created between the 1840s and 1990s in the service of art, politics, news, entertainment, and commerce, the exhibition offered a provocative new perspective on the history of photography as it traces the medium’s complex and changing relationship to visual truth. [via The MET NYC]

If you missed the exhibition do not despair because the book is still available at the Amazon link below:



Unidentified American artist
Man on Rooftop with Eleven Men in Formation on His Shoulders
c. 1930

Leap into the Void ~ by Yves Klein

As in his carefully choreographed paintings in which he used nude female models dipped in blue paint as paintbrushes, Klein's photomontage paradoxically creates the impression of freedom and abandon through a highly contrived process. In October 1960, Klein hired the photographers Harry Shunk and Jean Kender to make a series of pictures re-creating a jump from a second-floor window that the artist claimed to have executed earlier in the year. This second leap was made from a rooftop in the Paris suburb of Fontenay-aux-Roses. On the street below, a group of the artist’s friends from held a tarpaulin to catch him as he fell. Two negatives--one showing Klein leaping, the other the surrounding scene (without the tarp)--were then printed together to create a seamless "documentary" photograph. To complete the illusion that he was capable of flight, Klein distributed a fake broadsheet at Parisian newsstands commemorating the event. It was in this mass-produced form that the artist's seminal gesture was communicated to the public and also notably to the Vienna Actionists. [via The MET NYC]

Maurice Guibert (French, 1856-1913)
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec as Artist and Model
c. 1900

Unidentified artist
Man Juggling His Own Head
ca. 1880

Io + gatto ~by Wanda Wulz 1932

Wulz, a portrait photographer loosely associated with the Italian Futurist movement, created this striking composite by printing two negatives—one of her face, the other of the family cat—on a single sheet of photographic paper, evoking by technical means the seamless conflation of identities that occurs so effortlessly in the world of dreams.[via The MET NYC]

The Pond - Moonrise ~ by Edward J. Steichen 1904

Using a painstaking technique of multiple printing, Steichen achieved prints of such painterly seductiveness they have never been equaled. This view of a pond in the woods at Mamaroneck, New York is subtly colored as Whistler's Nocturnes, and like them, is a tone poem of twilight, indistinction, and suggestiveness. Commenting on such pictures in 1910, Charles Caffin wrote in Camera Work: "It is in the penumbra, between the clear visibility of things and their total extinction into darkness, when the concreteness of appearances becomes merged in half-realised, half-baffled vision, that spirit seems to disengage itself from matter to envelop it with a mystery of soul-suggestion." [via The MET NYC]


Human Relations ~ by William Mortensen 1932 

Mortensen began his career as a Hollywood studio photographer, turning out glamour portraits of stars such as Clara Bow and Jean Harlow. In the early 1930s he established a photography school in Laguna Beach, where he refined and promoted his own aesthetic—an eccentric blend of late Pictorialism, Surrealism, and Hollywood kitsch. Restlessly inventive in the darkroom, he employed a wide variety of techniques, including combination printing, heavy retouching, and physical and chemical abrasion of the negative. At times, his use of textured printing screens gave his photographs the appearance of etchings or lithographs, as in this audaciously grotesque picture, which was prompted, according the artist, by an overcharged long-distance telephone bill. [via The MET NYC]

Untitled ~ by Jerry N. Uelsmann 1976

Uelsmann revived the technique of combination printing pioneered by such Victorian art photographers as Oscar Gustave Rejlander and Henry Peach Robinson in the early 1960s, when darkroom manipulation was denigrated by many proponents of straight photography as a flagrant violation of photographic purity. His pictures, which he creates in a darkroom equipped with seven enlargers, are filled with mind-bending paradoxes, oblique symbolism, and bizarre contrasts of scale. Uelsmann’s work is now considered an important precursor to the seamless compositing widely associated with digital photography and Photoshop. [via The MET NYC]

Jerry N. Uelsmann (American, born 1934)
Untitled
1969
Find

Find ~ Will Connell 1937

In 1938 Connell, an advertising photographer and teacher at the Art Center School in Los Angeles, published In Pictures: A Hollywood Satire, a book of forty-eight photographs that used Surrealist fantasy and photomontage to lampoon the Hollywood studio system. The book offers up a vivid assortment of Tinseltown types: the cigar-chomping producer, the pushy stage mother, and this scantily clad starlet besieged by a horde of colossal sensation-seeking cameras. [via The MET NYC]
John Paul Pennebaker (American, 1903-1953)
Sealed Power Piston Rings
1933


Carving One of Our Watermelons

Carving One of Our Watermelons~ by William H. Martin 1909

The tall-tale postcard was a uniquely American genre that flourished in the Midwest between about 1908 and 1915. The earliest master of the genre was William H. “Dad” Martin, a studio photographer in Kansas who established a successful sideline crafting photomontages of outlandish agricultural abundance. Intimately familiar with the tribulations of Midwestern farmers, including a fierce drought that parched the land for most of the 1890s, Martin lampooned the inflated promises of fertile soil, abundant rain, and hardy livestock that land companies used to lure settlers westward.

In Olden Times, if Folks Were Good, the Stork Would Bring a Baby Sweet and Fair~ by Keystone View Company, London 1907


A Pair of Hungry Pike

A Pair of Hungry Pike ~ by Unknown, Canadian 1911

A Car Load of Texas Corn

A Car Load of Texas Corn ~ by George B. Cornish 1910


Sunday, January 13, 2013

Vincent Van Gogh’s Self-Portrait Turned Into a Photograph ~ by Tadao Cern

Photographer Tadao Cern took one of  Vincent Van Gogh's most famous self-portraits and used some Photoshop magic recreate it as a still photograph. Pretty remarkable job I must say!



Here is Van Gogh's original self portrait. It was painted in 1889 and hangs at The Musee d'Orsay in Paris
(I was lucky enough to see it in person.)

The photographic transformation in progress
tadaocern.com

The final photograph of Van Gogh created by Tadao Cern
"I recreated one of the most famous Vincent Van Gogh self portraits as a photography using DSLR and ‘some’ Photoshop tricks. The idea came spontaneously – I saw my friend that has ginger hair and beard and thought that it would be very funny to make a portrait of Vincent Van Gogh. He liked the idea and a week later we met in my studio. After some preparation work we made few shots and after a day of editing the final image I posted it on the Internet. At the moment I have no plans to make something similar but who knows:) I think that this only one image stand quite good for himself as a project already. Funny that a lot of people are confused by the image. Some of them keep asking me if there’s really a guy that looks so alike Van Gogh. Some of them don’t believe that it’s a photo at all. And some of them thought that I really took a picture of Vincent Van Gogh." ~ Tadao Cern


Here is a short video of the Photoshop process Cern painstakingly undertook to achieve the uncanny result.
Revealing The Truth from Tadao Cern on Vimeo.


"First of all, I needed a model with red hair. Than we the help of a stylist we recreated the outfit. And then after basic composition shot I took a lot of detail shots which where incorporated in the main image. It was a lot of cloning, stretching, drawing, pushing, lifting. It was almost as painting a new image looking at the reference and original painting standing next to me." ~ Tadao Cern

Here is a cool video merging all of Van Gogh's self Portraits

Thursday, March 22, 2012

ADOBE Senior Creative Director Russel Brown Introduces 6 of His Favourite New Features in Photoshop CS6

Russell Brown, Senior Creative Director, walks through his 6 favorite features in Photoshop CS6 beta. Learn more about the new capabilities of Adobe Camera Raw 7.0, the new adaptive Wide Angle feature, Field Blur, Iris Blur and Tilt-Shift. Also take a look at Content-Aware Move and Patch, the all-new Crop tool and incredible new possibilities with video.

For a free BETA download of CS6 click here


Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Sneak Peak at the New Selective Focus Blur Feature on Photoshop CS6

Want the look of an expensive ultra fast lens without the expense? ADOBE CS6 has a new tool that will add blur to any image without masks, layers or depth maps.

*click on image for a larger view*


Monday, November 14, 2011

A Heart Warming Story From the Online Photo Community.

Redditor Bbilbay posted this photo of his daughter and her best friend (who was recently diagnosed with leukemia) to the Reddit community, asking them if they could photoshop the background “to something pretty or fun”.




Here are some images that were created from the original image. Well done online photo community, well done!


Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Monday, October 17, 2011

Sneak Peak of the NEW Jaw-Dropping Photoshop Deblurring feature!

Drink too much coffee and then go out and shoot? No problem, Adobe has your back my friends. Adobe has released videos from its AdobeMAX event, including coverage of the image deblur feature for removing camera shake and motion blur


Before:

After: BAM! sharp as tack!

In this video demo, Jue Wang will show you a sneak peek of a potential new feature that allows users to remove blurriness from digital photos caused by camera shake while the pictures were being taken.

Revolutionary New Software for Photographers

Researcher Kevin Karsch and his team at the University of Illinois are developing software that lets users easily insert objects into photographs. The most impressive aspect of this software is how it handles the lighting in the scene and it's effect on the inserted objects. This opens up a whole world of possibilities for photographers. Composite images in photoshop can take hours of retouching work to achieve a similar effect. Matching the lighting is usually the most difficult part of the process.

Abstract from developers: "We propose a method to realistically insert synthetic objects into existing photographs without requiring access to the scene or any additional scene measurements. With a single image and a small amount of annotation, our method creates a physical model of the scene that is suitable for realistically rendering synthetic objects with diffuse, specular, and even glowing materials while accounting for lighting interactions between the objects and the scene. Our system has applications in the movie and gaming industry, and user content creation, among others" (photographers!)


Rendering Synthetic Objects into Legacy Photographs from Kevin Karsch on Vimeo.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Sneak Peek of Photoshop CS5




Among the major updates are features such as Content-Aware Fill, Puppet Warp, and HDR Pro and HDR Toning. I am looking forward to using the Content-Aware Fill tool. It will save me hours of retouching. Thank you Adobe!