![]() |
Untitled - A Church in Montreal.
1 Attachment(s)
PS Cs3 is pretty. Was playing with the new quick selection tool and it is awesome!
Here is something I was working on last night. Kris. |
My gawd man... that is fantastic. I covet such skill.
|
Oh, I envy both of your avatars because they truly convey the expression that this photo has put upon my face. It is something like this :D
Awesome photo, guy! :thumbsup: |
That's pretty good Kris, very atmospheric. The person in the lower right corner even adds to the picture; it almost makes it look like a shot from a movie, with that person heading towards the church.
|
Awesome atmosphere !!
I often passed there but never saw the Basilique Notre-Dame like this. Thank for sharing :-) |
Glad you guys enjoy it. I wasn't to sure if I liked it. But I know I do now!
|
I have to agree, this is an awesome shot and it looks almost surreal... What filters did you use?
|
Great work, I'm supposed to be learning cs3 but I haven't started yet. From the looks of this I should!
The only negatives I see is that the light's coming from the wrong direction and it looks like either you didn't line the layers up right or the church needs to be sharper. Awesome look though. :) |
The lighting seems off-kilter because they're coming from different directions and it doesn't make sense to me. Why is the castle blurry?
In a perfect world where you could reshoot, this is what I would do: a) wait for an actually cloudy day and photograph the bldg with the authentic background rather than photoshopping it. b) use a second photograph to clone out the light pole as it disrupts the flow of the architecture. |
Awesome building. Nice angle on your shot.
I need to upgrade my PS... |
awesome photo, that photo looks like something out of a horror movie or something!
|
I'd love to have that blown up and put on my wall!
|
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 01:22 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0 PL2
© 2002-2012 Tilted Forum Project