Luminous Landscape Forum
Raw & Post Processing, Printing => Digital Image Processing => Topic started by: uintaangler on April 15, 2016, 05:19:13 pm
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I felt providing a link to this photographer's website would be preferable to copy and pasting one of her images.
Please scroll through the framed images in this gallery: Chris Dahlquist (http://chrisdahlquist.com/now-showing/16-x-22-gallery/)
On a lot of them there are thin black lines going across the entire sky.
I like her work and I am wondering how she gets this effect?
( Although, I am not sure I think it enhances her lovely, painting-like images )
Thanks.
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kinda looks like a Photoshop composite of some textured (roughly painted) surface (and/or Photoshopped surface) and the regular image.
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how he gets this effect?
it enhances his
Check the site, Chris is a woman.
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The lines in the sky look like compression artifacts to me.
Rand
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Check the site, Chris is a woman.
Thanks
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The lines in the sky look like compression artifacts to me.
Rand
And how are those created?
Thanks
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My guess is a texture was created and layered in using Photoshop.
The Bio says Chris is a "she".
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It appears to be a photographythat has been worked with an application that will give it a painted effect, i.e brush strokes. There are many tools out there that can give a similar if not identical look.
Paul C
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It isn't done in software; each print is done on a unique surface. If you explore the website she provides a brief but reasonably detailed explanation of her goals and technique.
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It isn't done in software; each print is done on a unique surface. If you explore the website she provides a brief but reasonably detailed explanation of her goals and technique.
Where did you find this explanation on her website?
Thanks
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towards the end:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uyEH92befjs