Wednesday, February 19, 2020

Mitchell C- Drifting

This title of this image is called Drifting. It was taken over the summer while my family was on a cruise. I had come across this on one of our excursion and thought it made an amazing subject. I had combines two pictures together, the rocks and the boat. I edited this with photoshop. I added grain on the original image, which is something I wish I had not done. I think that this image turned out very good and I am very pleased with the end result.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

The sand looks dry just like the dirt

Anonymous said...

I really like this image. I love the sea foam color of the washed up boat and how they work well with the peachy colors of the rocks of the shore. I do wish the boat was a bit more placed in the lower left corner of the rule of thirds grid, I think that would be better for the subject. Overall good image.

Anonymous said...

Great job Glenda. I love how you edited the ship. It almost looks like you got the photos offline. I love the brightness. The ship is the subject but you incorporated it into the scene. I love this photo. I want to hang it in a beach house. great job.

Anonymous said...

This picture is so sick. I love how wide angle the image is and how it shows the entire boat and the scenery around it. I honestly wouldn't of know that this image was a composite without you pointing it out so its really believable. Personally I think that the added grain looks really cool and gives the image a little texture. Overall this is a cool picture.

Anonymous said...

I really like this image! The color scheme really works for the picture, with the boat a cooler blue and the rocks a lighter tan. This contrast gives the picture a very well defined sense of scale. As far as technical prowess goes, this composite is incredibly realistic! Until I read through your description, I wouldn't have known it was a composite. Overall, it's a great use of previously captured pictures to make something great with knowledge gained in photoshop!