A quick & helpful guideline for photographers to help them choose models and how to find them.
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November 13, 2006
2.3 MB 2272×1704 StatisticsCamera Data
NIKON
COOLPIX L4 10/20 second F/2.8 6 mm 119 Share
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See the Rivers get a dell, and watch out for Tactus </
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"A man who trust everyone is a fool, and a man who trust no one is a fool."
"He came like the wind, like the wind touched everything, and like the wind was gone"
"Ce n'est pas parce que vous êtes plusieurs à avoir tort que vous avez raison."
~Dot
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\ View My VFX Portfolio \
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Well, what can I say.............................................
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See the Rivers get a dell, and watch out for Tactus </
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Well, what can I say.............................................
I have a folder on my Desktop labled "Space scenes" It contains planets that I found and made, explosions, textures, interesting colors/gradients, stars etc.
A example will be this, used for my Relesing the Kyubi piece:
[link]
I loved the top colors in the picture, so I croped out everything but the top clouds. I then moved it to my picture and adjusted blending options, (overlay, soft light, pin light, hard light, fading). I do this for about 3-10 layers. Then I go CRAZY with the clone stamp tool moving hightlights and shadows around for all my differant layers. Also alot of masking.
In most pieces I add fire hightlights to them, (example in this piece is the basketball, nice ... glow to it). Anyway I just make normal fire and make it overlay or something.
Also you can't say, "well just hide the picture of you, and you will still have a normal backround." Because I do not make the planets, stars, colors etc. for any particular piece. I edit the layers for each image i'm making, and If I hid all the other layers than just the backround layers it would look like one big crappy smudgy mess.
Ah man that took a while, hope you understand
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