![]() Most people coming into photography really don’t appreciate how certain practices or decisions all have effects that can be later used for the one of the most fun aspects of photography: To generate the feeling you want to get from the shot. for bringing the slightly smeared stars back out into the forefront: They’re the main reason I stopped at the reservoir that night.for the colorful reminder that I need to eat more carrots (and, consequently, for making me think about the real color contributions of oak brush, which I’ve previously written off as too dull to consider recuperating), and.for showing off bloom reminiscent of some modern games (I’m reminded of Breath of the Wild’s effect for distant hills),.for an edit that directly expresses my original intent for the photo, with such a subtle tragedy that I can’t see under the hood of the edit to find out how you captured it (I’m not above begging),.for capturing, in the first, the specific look I’ve seen on many postcards featuring Timpanogos’s rock, and a much dreamier edit that feels like how I’d see it if I were fishing,.Thanks, in addition, though I can’t post your edits spread through the series (yet), to: To be sappy, PlayRaws are my favorite, specifically because of how expressive it becomes. It’s unfair to the process to pretend that I’m any authority, so I hope me replying to everyone isn’t taken that way clicking a heart icon just doesn’t pump the amount of blood needed to reciprocate the gestures, here. 7z collection of all 60 shots for your own personal play–there might even be a better shot for a solo than what I previously posted I simply put up the first. Otherwise, if you are all interested in playing with the entire dataset, I can find a spot to host the 940MB. ![]() I’m sorry that I don’t yet have the knowledge to make everyone else’s edits into this process I’ll get some time over the weekend to play with automating filmulator, ART, and the others, though I can’t promise anything. ( ffmpeg.exe -framerate 20 -i %04d_01.jpg -c:v libx264 -crf 20 -preset veryslow -pix_fmt yuv420p -an out.mp4 did the trick) Since I’m on Windows, darktable-cli wouldn’t let me automate this the way I wanted to (as it has been crashing on launch the last few releases), and so this was just the manual process of loading each xmp, exporting, and then running it through ffmpeg for the final result. I’m thinking of using the sequence to make a blended GIF of sorts, but that would require learning a new process. It was too cold and late to stay long enough to do this dance justice, but the result is pleasant. Since all of your edits and words about my photo have been so moving, I figured I’d demonstrate the photo moving in return.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |