How he does it?
Thru internet surfing I reached to a gentleman by the name of Mr Rarindra Prakarsa who create BEAUTIFUL artistic images.
I would like to know how he does it.
The link to his images is here:
http://www.photo.net/photodb/member-pho ... nclude=all
Does anybody know how he does it? Does he use special s/w?
If you know the answer please write me.
Thanks
Post Edited (11:40h)
I would like to know how he does it.
The link to his images is here:
http://www.photo.net/photodb/member-pho ... nclude=all
Does anybody know how he does it? Does he use special s/w?
If you know the answer please write me.
Thanks
Post Edited (11:40h)
Why dont you ask him?? he's a member here !
Thank you Ruud.
Unfortunately I am not sure how could I find him? Because there are 5 languages here and God knows where about I can find him? Shall I look into .com, .de, .es, .it, or .fr ?
Is there any search engine inside this site to find a particular member?
Don't know.
Please help me in this matter.
Thanks
Unfortunately I am not sure how could I find him? Because there are 5 languages here and God knows where about I can find him? Shall I look into .com, .de, .es, .it, or .fr ?
Is there any search engine inside this site to find a particular member?
Don't know.
Please help me in this matter.
Thanks
Just look in the Gallery!!!
[fc-foto:6704720]
[fc-foto:6704720]
I'd like to know too...i asked him, but I didn't get a definitive answer.
Pat
Pat
To me it seems he uses some kind of HDR technique mixed with hours of photoshop tweaking of layers and blending options.
That way he can control the exact lighting and coloring of each minute part of his picture.
That way he can control the exact lighting and coloring of each minute part of his picture.
hello, sorry for my bad english...
here is the german thread about rarindra:
http://www.fotocommunity.de/forum/read. ... 4&t=120824
i've done some works in this direction:
[fc-foto:8900026]
[fc-foto:8905055]
[fc-foto:8881937]
[fc-foto:8871545]
LG Sandra
here is the german thread about rarindra:
http://www.fotocommunity.de/forum/read. ... 4&t=120824
i've done some works in this direction:
[fc-foto:8900026]
[fc-foto:8905055]
[fc-foto:8881937]
[fc-foto:8871545]
LG Sandra
Thanks Sandra Le for the info - look like an interesting thread :-)
19.10.07, 08:57
Post 9 of 11
The showed photography are made with a Canon Digital Rebel XT, also known as 350D in Germany.
Further he tells about dodge, burn and brusching.
It is seams to be the way to do it.
BUT :-)
The original must be a very good made photo. You know: The right light at the right moment with the right constrast.
One of my buddies try something like that.
Only (free !) filters and tunings over a lot of layers.
*looking for a pic* *back in a few minutes*
Here
[fc-foto:10273647]
The background is something like that and made with "LOtis illumination fix toolkit" and diverse layers and cutings.
But the original was pretty ready for this purpose.
Post Edited (3:21h)
Further he tells about dodge, burn and brusching.
It is seams to be the way to do it.
BUT :-)
The original must be a very good made photo. You know: The right light at the right moment with the right constrast.
One of my buddies try something like that.
Only (free !) filters and tunings over a lot of layers.
*looking for a pic* *back in a few minutes*
Here
[fc-foto:10273647]
The background is something like that and made with "LOtis illumination fix toolkit" and diverse layers and cutings.
But the original was pretty ready for this purpose.
Post Edited (3:21h)
Try this.
http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/read. ... e=24971754
Havn't tried it myself.
Joe.
http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/read. ... e=24971754
Havn't tried it myself.
Joe.
25.08.08, 00:58
Post 11 of 11
The recipe: -
Take 1 camera. If analogue add 1 high quality photo scanner.
Mix results with Photoshop CS3 (or something similar), and add a lot of time and patience. ;~D
Seriously, forget the "how", and just admire his photographs!
Kindest regards,
John.
Post Edited (2:58h)
Take 1 camera. If analogue add 1 high quality photo scanner.
Mix results with Photoshop CS3 (or something similar), and add a lot of time and patience. ;~D
Seriously, forget the "how", and just admire his photographs!
Kindest regards,
John.
Post Edited (2:58h)