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aegiandyad β€” Not Max Ernt's Joie De Vivre

Published: 2011-05-22 13:18:54 +0000 UTC; Views: 424; Favourites: 16; Downloads: 6
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Description Not this: [link] . Not anything, really, just another wildly over processed skip side detail.
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Comments: 7

tttooofff [2015-02-08 02:18:08 +0000 UTC]

what is this?

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aegiandyad In reply to tttooofff [2015-02-08 12:17:14 +0000 UTC]

If you look very carefully... it's a young bare breasted girl with a blue pony tail, flinging her arms wide in ecstasy. "WildlyΒ  over ptocessed skip side detail" about covers it, but you hve to know that a 'skip' is what the British call and trapezoid big iron wheel less dumpster, usually painted a bright chrome yellow and scarred by much use, with rust in the spots where the paint has been scratched. What I did was solarised and 'invert' [turn negative] the original and then I drew the outline of the girl using a mouse and re-hued it. These are all Photoshop CS 5 'filters' and effects, but the original photograph has not actually been added to or subtracted from by any kind of cutting or pasting.

Should you want to see more... much more, search on 'solarised' in our gallery aegiandyad.deviantart.com/gall… . The best of these are if cross eye viewable stereoscopic 3-D!

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tttooofff In reply to aegiandyad [2015-02-13 12:10:01 +0000 UTC]

Β  Β i'll never understand this.

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aegiandyad In reply to tttooofff [2015-02-13 13:30:17 +0000 UTC]

Must be all those typos I left in it... sorry about that. When you turn a light on while the paper is in the developing bath, you expose and start developing the new light straight away. Before you can close the door or switch off the white light your paper is ruined; 'solarized'! But Man Ray, the surrealist photographer, found that if you did it 'just enough', it left already 'developed' print areas largely untouched and had its greatest effect in the under exposed parts which hadn't turned dark yet, where it produced dark tones or complimentary colours that looked strange or 'wrong'. Naturally, this appealed to surrealists and record sleeve designers for Vanilla Fudge, Captain Beefheart and so on. The Photoshop designers knew this and so they wrote a software 'filter' that emulates the process with a 'one shot' flash of virtual white light. It's hard to understand, but not impossible.

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led-sabbath [2011-05-24 22:01:07 +0000 UTC]

The Wonderland's Alice, ha!

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led-sabbath [2011-05-23 18:44:32 +0000 UTC]

I see Alice in there..

πŸ‘: 0 ⏩: 1

aegiandyad In reply to led-sabbath [2011-05-24 20:53:05 +0000 UTC]

Alice-in-Wonderland Alice... or Alice B. Toklas? [link] [?]

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