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The Pioneer Museum located on Cloyne Ontario is home to some many old pieces of our history. It's free to visit but they rely on donations. For those looking more for a Staycation you just might to explore some of the little out of the way museums that are her in Ontario.

365/178 Green waves on mural

#iphone7+ #snapseed #foodieapp leonardoapp #vsco 4

One of my favorite edits. Started with Jamie’s “Peace” selfie, then processed on iPhone with ToonCamera, Popsicolor and LeonardoApp. I was inspired to 'toon it up because it was so low-rez: 320x320. That roughness serves the abstraction here.

if you'll...

 

This image has had quite the circuitous path to completion.

On 02 January, I had been strolling around the ABQ Botanic Garden. At the entrance to the children's fantasy garden is this dragon. That morning the over cast sky acted as a giant softbox, giving fairly even light rather than our more common hard light and harsh shadow.

I had been thinking that somehow, I might find a use for the capture in something composited, but so far, nothing has compelled its use.

Recently, with purchasing the iPhone 7, I realized that I could get images from my computer, shot with my "real" cameras, into the phone via the Dropbox app.

In the first comment box below, you'll see the relatively unedited image that had been shot with the Fuji X-T1 and the long lens.

I used Lr to send it there as a jpeg, and from Dropbox it was imported into Snapseed.

Snapseed was used to lighten the shadows and lighten the white background, then exported back to the camera's gallery/album.

 

Just yesterday I learned about the Handy Photo app which has something called "magic crop." One can expand an image, and the app extrapolates data, providing more real estate around a subject.

You might not see much of that difference between this finished image and the start image due to the border, but quite a bit of space was added around the subject in the Handy Photo app.

 

From there it was imported into the Stackables app. One reviewer calls Stackables, a "grunge" app. Essentially, it can stack layers of textures and colors and provide various blend modes and even rudimentary masking.

This is where most of the colors and textures were added.

 

Also yesterday I learned about the Leonardo app. Like Stackable, it does things in layers, but can mask more completely. I didn't need to use that feature, but imported the last image created in Stackables, then on top of it placed the essentially black and white image edited in Handy Photo. Changing that layer's blend mode to multiply caused only the darker areas to show, and created a bit more contrast.

 

But that's not all you get...

That image worked on in Leonardo was then imported into the Hipstamatic app, where filters of lens and film were utilized. The combo of Jane Lens and the Love 81 film created a much more dramatic image.

 

However, once imported back into the computer, I wasn't happy that the last editing had blown out some of the white highlights in the image.

So from Lr, the last image edited in Hipstamatic and the last image edited in Leonardo were layered in Ps, where masking allowed the better highlights of the Leonardo image come through, hiding the blown highlights in the Hipstamatic image.

And now we're done.

  

Happy Sliders Sunday!

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