Sunday, February 13, 2011

Edit: Borders

I had a lot of fun learning different border effects. It really can make a regular picture really turn into a piece of art. Here are three different effects I have learned.

Original

Edited

 
Little Chickadee: 2/2/11—1:00 PM; Rexburg, ID; f/5.6; 1/800 sec; Canon PowerShot A 1100
-I added contrast and more saturation to help the picture look better. For the edge effect, I used the #11 Flexible Brushed-on Effect. I used an all black mask and painted the picture back into view with white paint. I changed the opacity several times on my brush to give it a more realistic brush stroke look.

Original

Edited:

Always Watching: 1/31/11—1:23 PM; Rexburg, ID; f/3.5; 1/125 sec; Canon PowerShot A 1100
-I increased the saturation and made the skin more even using a soft paint brush at 30% opacity. I used the #9 Sprayed Edge Effect for the border on this picture.This effect is obtained by adding a sprayed strokes filter and a border to the photo.

Original

Edited

La Bandera: 1/30/11—6:26 PM; Rexburg, ID; f/6.8; 1/500 sec; Canon PowerShot A 1100
-I increased the saturation and contrast. I used the #12 Double Fade Border for this picture. This border was created by increasing the canvas size to put the black border around the edge. The inner border was created by using the rectangle shape tool. First, I added a white rectangle to the inside of the black border and then, using a mask, got rid of the inner part of it. I added a strong motion blur to the inside so it would fade into the picture and decreased the opacity of the layer.

1 comment:

Annie said...

Great Job Carlie! I really like the border you did on the bird photo! I can't believe you got that awesome photo of a bird! Congrats on that, they're pretty skitterish! You chose the perfect effect to apply on this photo it gives it a very wintery cool look. GReat work!