Fantastic work - I love this, especially with a picture in an everyday situation and then cum-covered!
ok, this is not stitched together - but still a nice before/after set I think...
Fantastic work - I love this, especially with a picture in an everyday situation and then cum-covered!
ok, this is not stitched together - but still a nice before/after set I think...
Thanks vicetn.
Sorry alkie, don't have anymore of her. Originally I had just the one pic, then (over the years) found a further two.
Anyway, a further ten to intrigue you....
Last edited by steviem; 10-15-2012 at 06:08 PM.
the ba385 it is one ff member: Dulla please remove it
tanks for the other
The_Hawk
http://www.facialforum.net/showthread.php?t=48074
Beautiful redhead girl...
damo62 - the link with the redhead girl is amazing - thanks.
Ten more to stimulate your senses.....
Very hot and cool pics, thank you for it! With which application you are doing this photo collages?
love that!!!!
I’m sure there must be lots of different software packages out there to use for making collages, but I use Adobe Photoshop CS5. I’ve used older versions in the past with the same success.
It’s relatively easy to pick up and, as a novice user, you can do basic photo manipulation. Also there all lots of other more advanced features and possibilities, if you’ve got the time, to investigate.
What I do.
I have folders of pre-sorted folders. I open all the photos from the folder in one go, they are imported as separate photos (think of this as a simple pile of photographs).
I then choose one of the photos as my background and make the canvas really big (think of this as sticking one of your photos on to a much larger piece of paper).
In turn I visit each of the other photos and copy and paste them to the background photo, closing each photo down as I go.
This leaves one large document to work on with multiple layers, each layer contains one of the photos.
Each photo is visible on the screen at the same time.
You can resize each photo independent of the others.
You can increase tone, contrast and brightness individually.
You can choose to hide any photos that won’t fit into your scheme or are maybe too similar to another photo.
You can red-eye reduce, paint out unwanted areas, align, manipulate, erase sections and stitch together.
It does take a bit of time if you want to do it properly.
I find it simple to do, but maybe that’s because I’ve used it quite often and I'm familiar with the workings and shortcuts of Photoshop.
Hope that helps.
Glad you're enjoying the pics.![]()