Bora_Horza
Contributor
Hi All, just been messing on photoshop with some of my old photos taken with a Sea & Sea MX-10 and other 35mm film cameras, and some of my 'almost good' pics taken digitally.
The problem with these pics is that while they might be of interesting subjects, the quality of the photos themselves (or how they were scanned from film to jpg) is not quite up there with the crisp, sharp images that are possible nowdays - so either a bit out of focus, grainy, or over exposed.
I think its only so far that photoshop can turn an 'ok photo' into a 'quality photo'. But by using some of the 'artistic' functions in photoshop, you can turn an 'ok photo' into an 'interesting painting', thus neatly sidestepping a lot of 'sharp focus' issues and all that stuff.
Not exactly a unique insight I know! But I was pleasantly surprised by the results that are possible, and its made me re-evaluate my catalogue of pics in a new light.
Anyway, a bit of fun, and here are a few examples of what I'm going on about
This one was taken with one of those plastic disposable UW cameras:
And the re-vamp...
The problem with these pics is that while they might be of interesting subjects, the quality of the photos themselves (or how they were scanned from film to jpg) is not quite up there with the crisp, sharp images that are possible nowdays - so either a bit out of focus, grainy, or over exposed.
I think its only so far that photoshop can turn an 'ok photo' into a 'quality photo'. But by using some of the 'artistic' functions in photoshop, you can turn an 'ok photo' into an 'interesting painting', thus neatly sidestepping a lot of 'sharp focus' issues and all that stuff.
Not exactly a unique insight I know! But I was pleasantly surprised by the results that are possible, and its made me re-evaluate my catalogue of pics in a new light.
Anyway, a bit of fun, and here are a few examples of what I'm going on about
This one was taken with one of those plastic disposable UW cameras:
And the re-vamp...
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