This image is another experiment with digital double exposures -- double exposures created using layers in Photoshop. The model is Craig Davidson. The two images I used to create the double exposure are one frame apart on the same roll. That might seem obvious since there is very little difference in Craig's size and position between the two images, but in most cases the images I decide to use for this effect are not adjacent on the roll. Sometimes they aren't even on the same roll. To create this image I used the Photoshop blending mode "difference" which inspired the title of the image.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Popular Posts
-
More work this week with Damon. These two images are the first with infrared film -- both from the studio. Sometimes a model has one outs...
-
I have been working on a series of images framed by the french doors in the back of my house for several years. This image is part of that s...
-
The images this week are composites created with Photoshop. Regular readers of my blog will recognize them as part of the ongoing series of...
-
I've been experimenting with some new techniques. This one is fairly basic. It's just an inverted, or negative version of an image...
-
A still photograph is usually a section of space captured at a single instant of time. The photograph to the left breaks the paradigm in ...
-
I had thought the negatives to this shoot with Derek Russo from almost ten years ago were permanently lost. I noticed they were missing a ha...
-
This blog has suffered some neglect this month as I've focussed on building a social media following on Facebook and Twitter. If you ha...
No comments:
Post a Comment