View allAll Photos Tagged Decim8
This is what happens when a lad fails to go to bed on time. I gave myself a black eye doing this one.
This is my first ever attempt at processing an iPhone photo. Of course, all processing was done on my iPhone. It amazes me to ponder what people are doing with these pocket computers that also happen to function as mobile phones.
Lack of sleep and a pressing work deadline meant keeping the process very simple. No subtle layering to add other elements, no blending of what was there to achieve a more finished look. Just brute force and a short break from a hectic schedule to start learning.
Apps used for processing: Hipstamatic, Photogene, Tiffen Photo fx, Decim8, Pic Grunger
For Shock of the New Challenge #61 “Heavy Metal”
www.flickr.com/groups/shockofthenew/discuss/7215767388723... (Front Page Winner)
Taken on the iPhone and processed on the iPad using the following apps:
SuperimposeX
Decim8
Filterloop
Glitché
Stackables—Gradient
Snapseed
LoryStripes
Leonardo
Please forgive my 9 image upload today..I love doodling and experimenting with apps on my iphone or Ipad2, its easy to get carried away.. : ))
These started off initially with one image of a dancer I drew on my ipad2 using an app called flowpaper.
Then between the other various apps I have, I just kept going to see what would happen..
I cannot remember all the apps used or in what order but these are a mix including Picture Show, Decim8, Frametastic
Have a lovely weekend.. : ))
. . Original image by @postaljeff. Apps used: #Decim8, 100Camerasin1, PS Express, #Decosketch, #Mextures, Glaze, Camera Awesome, Vintage Reality, Snapseed
For Shock of the New Challenge #61 “Heavy Metal”
www.flickr.com/groups/shockofthenew/discuss/7215767388723...
From the destroyer, USS Cassin Young, docked in Boston.
“Built for speed and capability, USS Cassin Young engaged in seven Pacific battles in World War II, survived two Kamikaze hits, and served another full decade beyond her expected lifetime. Built in 1943 in San Pedro, California, she is one of 175 Fletcher-class destroyers built during World War II. Here in Charlestown, this navy yard built dozens of similar ships during the war. In the 1950s, Cassin Young and many other destroyers received regular repairs and modernization in Charlestown. Maintained by the National Park Service and an army of dedicated park volunteers, Cassin Young remains to this day as a testament to the crews who sailed her, and the men and women who built and maintained her.”—https://www.nps.gov/bost/learn/historyculture/usscassinyoung.htm
Taken with my iPhone and processed on the iPad using the following apps:
Decim8
SuperimposeX
Repix
Handy Photo (add canvas)
Affinity Photo
Tangent
Deco Sketch
Snapseed