
LIVE PIC #83: Oops... I'm sorry
January 23rd 2015
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This is the Titash life and adventures in photos!
This is my fridays Twitter and Google+ rendez-vous.
Have fun following my adventures.
The complete LivePic series:
www.titash.net/livepic
Concept of this series:
Each of the illustrated elements are traditionally made before joining them to the composition to be photographed. The photos are then recolored with digital processing (characters and elements drawn). With the exception of a few adjustments, minor corrections and scrubs, they is not photo manipulation! All pictures are real and any special effects were implemented in a traditional manner. This series is a laboratory for creative experimentation with light, composition, special effects...
January 23rd 2015
<<< PREV | FIRST | NEXT >>>
This is the Titash life and adventures in photos!
This is my fridays Twitter and Google+ rendez-vous.
Have fun following my adventures.
The complete LivePic series:
www.titash.net/livepic
Concept of this series:
Each of the illustrated elements are traditionally made before joining them to the composition to be photographed. The photos are then recolored with digital processing (characters and elements drawn). With the exception of a few adjustments, minor corrections and scrubs, they is not photo manipulation! All pictures are real and any special effects were implemented in a traditional manner. This series is a laboratory for creative experimentation with light, composition, special effects...
Category All / All
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 800 x 844px
File Size 464.2 kB
Listed in Folders
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomography
Here's the link to Wikipedia. The "Art" of tamography was quite popular in England during the early 20th Century. The images of fairy folk and other "Little People" became so popular that some hobbyists would claim that the images were real. Even Thomas Edison was fooled. I was surprised to find out that the term "Tamography" is now applied to 3-D medical scanning.
Here's the link to Wikipedia. The "Art" of tamography was quite popular in England during the early 20th Century. The images of fairy folk and other "Little People" became so popular that some hobbyists would claim that the images were real. Even Thomas Edison was fooled. I was surprised to find out that the term "Tamography" is now applied to 3-D medical scanning.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cottingley_Fairies
I had to look it up because I was curious about what you wrote. lol
I had to look it up because I was curious about what you wrote. lol
This tweet I posted yesterday will be an answer for you. :)
https://twitter.com/TitashMeerkat/s.....61593785466880
Yes I keep it but some are destroyedwhen I make the pic (burn... etc), few lost somewhere in my room and few others offered. :)
https://twitter.com/TitashMeerkat/s.....61593785466880
Yes I keep it but some are destroyedwhen I make the pic (burn... etc), few lost somewhere in my room and few others offered. :)
Yes. I refuse all difital manipulation in these pics, exept for correct colorsof the photo and coloring characters.
I choose that way to color to have better quality in the photo.
Traditionnal colors can look crappy when not enough light (and loooot work).
And printing colored version would be not really lovely... and expensive. ^^
I choose that way to color to have better quality in the photo.
Traditionnal colors can look crappy when not enough light (and loooot work).
And printing colored version would be not really lovely... and expensive. ^^
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