Posts Tagged ‘Photo Friday’

Photo Friday – Lugubrious. A high speed look at how I use Photoshop.

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

Lugubrious 450x171 Photo Friday   Lugubrious. A high speed look at how I use Photoshop.Ok so first up, I’m sure a few of you may have picked that it’s actually Saturday and not Friday. That is because a few things didn’t go according to plan. I while back I recall seeing a sped up video of someone painting in Adobe Photoshop. It looked great seeing all that went into the end piece of artwork. So I thought it’d be a cool idea to do something similar. Create a piece of artwork and speed it up. Sounds simple don’t it…

So the first thing I realise is that if I’m going to be doing a screen capture, I’d better clean up all the files I had scattered over my desktop. There went a good hour. Then I launched my screen capture program and made a test recording. It only recorded three frames per second. So there went another couple of hours as I played with the settings and made more tests until I got it right. The problem was, I’d never captured the whole screen before, just little parts of it. Capturing the whole screen in the format I was using, bogged the computer down so everything came to a standstill.

Then I opened Photoshop up and realised that I have it set up for using two monitors. I can barely screen capture one monitor, let alone two. So another hour disappeared as I rearranged my Photoshop panels. Arrrgggghhh! After I sorted it all out I saved all the settings so that next time I can jump straight into it. Unless I mess up my desktop again…

So with all of these frustrations I was no longer in a creative mood. I shut the computer down and decided to do it today instead. Needless to say there was some serious anger management taking place on the PlayStation last night. I was getting more kills than I have in quite a while.

So anyway… This morning I started. I hit record and began to create. I had thought about the base photograph a number of weeks ago and had originally wanted to create something with it to use as the Planet Hysteria heading image. Back then I got distracted by a cool image of a tree standing alone and, well, there it is at the top of the page. I think it’s better fitting too.

The image began to take shape. At the beginning, I didn’t really know what I wanted to create. All I had was a mood or tone that I wanted to portray. Something dark and gloomy, reminiscent of an apocalyptic wasteland. As you’ll see in the video, I went down a few paths that I didn’t like. At one point I spent quite a bit of time putting a boat into the scene, washed up on the shore. I didn’t like it. I felt it made the image too cluttered and I liked the emptiness of it.

The whole process took around three hours to complete. I think the end picture works, although it’s not what I had originally envisioned when I first thought about the photo a few weeks back. Upon seeing the completed image I thought of the title Lugubrious, which means looking or sounding sad and dismal. Glum.

I’m not entirely sure if I’m totally happy with the image and I’ll probably go back to it at some point and do some more work to it. But for now it is what it is. So without any further ado, here is the video of how the image was made in Photoshop.

You may want to click on the ‘Full Screen’ button, second from the right at the bottom to see all the detail. Hit the Escape key to bring you back to this page.

If any of you like the post-apocalyptic genre as much as I do, or even just a little bit, you should visit one of my friends web sites QuietEarth.us, named after the classic movie. Don and the gang review and keep up to date with all things apocalyptic as well as genre films.

The music is Ghost I by Nine Inch Nails. I found this whole album extremely inspiring and have created a number of images while listening to it. It was released under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike license. Which means I can use it here for non commercial purposes. You can purchase this awesome album by clicking on the Amazon ad below.

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Photo Friday – The Fairy Mill. The woods are alive with magic.

Friday, September 25th, 2009

Fairy Mill 450x579 Photo Friday   The Fairy Mill. The woods are alive with magic.I thought that this week I’d skip ahead a bit and write about one of my more recent images ‘The Fairy Mill’. But to do so I have to go back a bit first.

About five years ago, I found out about a group called the National Association of Photoshop Professionals or NAPP. They were responsible for publishing the ‘Photoshop User’ magazine. I had received a sample magazine and found it very educational. The tutorials and ‘how to’s’ were really well put togethre, so I decided to join up.

The magazine and online video tutorials were fantastic and I learned a lot quickly, but the best part of the membership was the community forums. It didn’t matter how stupid a question may seem, there was always someone who could help out without calling you and idiot for asking (unlike some other forums I had visited.)

One of the cool things the forum moderators started up was a weekly Photoshop battle. Each week, one of the moderators would post an image from the Stock Xchang website and it was our mission to create something special out of it. Sometimes there were strict guidelines to try and follow but mainly it was freeform. No prizes, no winners or losers, just a desire from all who participated to create the best work they could. It was a lot of fun, and pushed all of us creatively.

Over the years, life got busier and busier and I found little time to be a part of the community but always stayed a member and dropped by from time to time to see what was going on. A few weeks ago when I dropped in, I saw a battle image that just called out to me. I couldn’t resist, I had to do it.

I downloaded the image of the forest and started to work on it. I knew I needed a fairy to put in it so I began scouring another website, Deviant Art, for a stock image I could use. After searching through hundreds of shots, I found it. A stunning girl, posed in a light, summery, turquoise dress provided by Ranger Cookies Stock. I started putting the image together.

I have always had a love and fascination of the mystical and enchanted. Faeries, goblins, trolls, pixies and enchanted, magical forests. I love finding real locations that could be magical forests and photographing them to composite in the magical creatures. I’m even developing a children’s TV show that is set in an enchanted forest. It’s something that always brings me back to my childhood, how I used to have adventures running around, exploring the countryside in England.

I composited the image together, hand painting many of the lights and fairy dust elements. I played with the idea of putting a second fairy sitting on the mossy rock but it all started to look a little too cluttered. I finished it off and uploaded it to the forum. It felt good to be doing this again after so long away. I think I’ll have to do more again soon.

I thought the image turned out pretty good but I couldn’t help but feel that it was a shame it was made out of stock images rather than ones I had taken myself. I have hundreds of great landscape shots that would work perfectly for this type of image but I’ve never really gotten into photographing people. Maybe I’ll have to try doing a proper studio shoot with a model sometime.

If you or somebody you know feels like being turned into a mythical creature, please get in touch and we’ll organise a photo shoot. You can purchase prints of The Fairy Mill as well as other artwork I have created at RedBubble.com.

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Photo Friday – Drowning Solitude. The apocalypse is upon us.

Saturday, September 19th, 2009

Drowning Solitude 450x323 Photo Friday   Drowning Solitude. The apocalypse is upon us.

It’s photo friday again and this is one of my personal favorites. Drowning solitude. A small boat floats towards disaster as an apocalyptic sky threatens annihilation. There is so much going on with this image I almost don’t know where to start. I guess the beginning is a good a place as any.

Way back in 2006 I spent a day at Mount Dandenong, one of my favorite places around Melbourne. I went for a hike in the rain forest, taking lots of photos. Eventually I came to a clearing with a completely unobstructed view, looking towards Melbourne city about fifty kilometers away. Not thinking I would get a view like this, I hadn’t bought a telephoto lens with me. So I snapped a few wide shots off, thinking they wouldn’t turn out particularly good.

When I eventually saw the shots, I wasn’t very impressed. The city was too far off in the distance, and because it was an overcast day, the whole image was flat and lifeless. I filed it away, with no intention of using it for anything.

Weeks past and I managed to get some free time on my hands. I wanted to create something but wasn’t sure what. I started flicking through my photos to see if any of them would inspire me. Sure enough I came to that crappy photo of the view and instantly saw a vision of the apocalypse in my mind.

I’m sure that’ll come as no surprise to those who know me and are aware of my fascination (actually it’s probably more like an obsession) of the apocalypse. Something draws me to that genre and I don’t know what. I love the feeling of impending doom. The melancholy that comes after a civilization is lost. I even made a post-apocalyptic movie called Lost:Black Earth back in 2000.

I started to build the picture. I replaced the sky and created tornados, then flooded the whole area up to the city (sorry for those who live in Ferntree Gully. It was nothing personal…) The final addition was the boat. It just needed that little something for a focal point. I toned the whole image in a deep sepia to create the sense of menace and doom.

I couldn’t really tell you where the name came from. It just popped into my head and stuck. I often wonder if the boat is called ‘Solitude’ and it is about to be drowned. For someone who has deep thoughts, I rarely have them about my own artwork. For me creating art is all about feeling rather than thinking. I do what feels right even if it isn’t. And there is plenty that isn’t right with this image.

For instance, take a look at the water. It is so still and reflective. With such a storm thrashing above, I doubt that this is possible. Where is the reflection of the lightning in the water? The scale of the boat is all wrong. I’m sure there are other things that defy logic or reality too.

But I don’t care. All of these things were done the way they were because they felt right at the time and still do now. When the image was completed, I was stunned at how the photo that I thought was crap, had turned into something I was quite proud of.

It’s also interesting to note that this was a very early piece of art that I created before I knew how to use Adobe Photoshop particularly well. When I look at the project file now, I cringe at the terrible techniques I was using at the time. I guess this is proof that all that matters is the end product and not how you got to it.

You can purchase prints of Drowning Solitude as well as other artwork I have created at RedBubble.com.

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Photo Friday – J.O.T.T.P.O.I

Friday, September 11th, 2009

JOTTPOI Web Photo Friday   J.O.T.T.P.O.I

I thought it’d be a good idea to have a regular segment to this blog and what better way to wrap up the week with looking at some artwork. Every Friday, I plan on examining one of my photographs or pieces of artwork and give some insight into my thought process, any inspiration or stories behind it and possibly a look at ways I went about creating it.

At first I was thinking about going through all my work in some kind of order (probably chronological) but then I thought it’d be good to start with the piece I sold my first print of. It just so happens that this took place only last weekend.

While on a three month road-trip along the east coast of Australia, I became more focused to do something with the artwork I’ve been creating for a number of years now. A friend helped me get in touch with a new gallery that was opening in Camberwell near Melbourne called “Lioli”. The name stands for Love it or leave it. It appealed to me straight away.

I sent them links to my work online and they wrote back to me to say they’d love to have some of my work as part of their opening. When I eventually returned to Melbourne, I got to the task of choosing ten pieces and getting them printed and framed. I have to at this point give a huge thank you to Tony Knight at Manark Printing who helped me immensely with this process. Tony is a very talented photographer himself and clearly has a passion for creating the very best quality of work. He taught me a lot about the process.

I delivered the final prints to the gallery, and I have to say, for a moment I felt a sense of pride. More so than I have with any of my other achievements. A few days later I attended the opening night, which was totally insane. There were so many people there, you couldn’t move. I didn’t stay very long as I was feeling the claustrophobia creep in.

Upon leaving I decided that I wouldn’t react my normal neurotic way where I’d be calling up every five minutes to see if anything had sold and then pacing around wondering why no one had called me back and all the time having a knot in my stomach. I decided to not think about it and get on with normal life. It’s not that I didn’t care, cause I did. I just didn’t want the possibility of rejection and failure to crush me. I’m still not entirely sure if this was a healthy or negative way to react.

So I got on with my life, looking for new projects to work on and dreaming up this website among other things. Then last weekend I got an email from Chris and Jackie at the gallery, stating that a lady had put the piece titled ‘JOTTPOI’ on layby and wanted to know more about it. If it meant anything and what the name stood for.

I could’ve been in trouble as a lot of my work has no pre-thought behind it and just evolves out of me looking at a photo and tinkering with it. Fortunately this particular piece did have meaning and was created for a purpose.

J.O.T.T.P.O.I. – Journey Of The Two Professors Of Imaginality

Basically the image came out of a conversation I had with a friend, Chris Daniels, about creativity and the paths we were taking. He told me about a vision that he had about these spiraling light rays and how it represented creativity. We got into a discussion and came up with a rough diagram that represented how we both journey through the creative process. How at first we are bombarded with constant external input. From experiences we have, people we meet, things we read, TV and films we watch, games we play, etc…

Over time, all of this input comes together and starts swirling around and mixing and intertwining until BOOM! It reaches a critical mass in our minds and explodes into a creative focus like a laser beam. The creative energy that is released then ripples outward in all directions, affecting all that it comes into contact with.

Almost as soon as the conversation had begun, I had visualized this image in my mind, When Chris made a rough sketch on a bit of paper it was identical to what I was seeing. As soon as he left, I jumped on the computer and set about making it into something spectacular. I set the whole thing against a backdrop of deep space with distant nebulae.

All of this took place way back in November of 2005. Since then I’ve shown quite a few people the completed image and a varied amount of interpretations, more so than any other piece I have created. “transformation from mind to body, becoming one with the divine”, “space and time with the threads of life”, “a spacial anomaly like wormhole”. For some reason, everyone likes this one and I am yet to hear any negative feedback. I wish I could say the same for all of my artwork…

I have prints of this and other works on display at the Red Bubble web site where they are also available for sale.

I hope this has given you some insight into this image. I’d love to hear any other interpretations or comments you may have.

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