Wednesday Weirdness

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Weekend before last we went to an art fair here in town and ended up talking with one of the artists whose booth really caught our eye. He was a photographer out of Belgium with a name I don't recall but his explanation of his process has stuck with me. He told us that he shot with film, scanned it in, reduced the saturation until he was left with just the blacks and greys and then printed the result. After that he then added the color back in with watercolors. I don't have any photos of his work to show you but the results were rather impressive and interesting.

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He was quite certain that you couldn't achieve the same results using purely digital means. I don't know enough about Photoshop to contest that assertion but it got me to pondering what weird, interesting things you could do with the 'shop. Last night I was in one of my 'I don't know what I want to work on but I want to work on something different' moods and decided to experiment, the results of which you see before you.

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To get these I opened the photos in Photoshop like normal, tweaked the temperature and levels a bit and then inverted the image. After that I converted the result to black and white and then played with the brightness, contrast, and levels a bit more. Now I just have to figure out what sorts of shots yield the best results with this treatment.

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Anyone else have a bit of Photoshop weirdness or digital wizardry they like to use to create different stuff or just to break up the monotony of the usual?

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I bet these would be fun with people shots.
I once stylized and image of my dog so much that the final result was something close to a gig and I had to resize it to share it on peakd.
And I think you can get the same results as the art guy if you also use something like procreate after washing out the images.

I bet you're right, I hadn't thought of that. May have to experiment with some of my cop photos.

I once stylized and image of my dog so much that the final result was something close to a gig

🤣🤣🤣 I'm scared to ask how many layers there were in that...

Good medium for experimentation.

With regards to the layers, I had no idea what I was doing, I was just playing around in Lightroom with all the options until I wound up with a beautifully stylized purple version of my dog.
(When it comes to technology, I seldom know wtf I'm doing, only that I am doing it.)

I love these!

That's really neat. I edit with GIMP so not sure what options Photoshop has, but in the past I've used a process called Colorize to "paint' black and white photos into something that looks more like art than photography. Sort of like what that watercolor artist was doing, except digitally. I imagine his work looks quite unique.