Found a BULL lurking in my garage....
#1
Found a BULL lurking in my garage....
i woke up today, and to my amazement found this BEAUTIFUL YELLOW BEAST resting in my garage. apparently, my roommate's friend just picked up this lambo, and dropped it off for the day while they went out. i slept in, and found myself waking up to this.... A GREAT DREAM... haha... well here are some photos i shot today....
(please bare in mind, i couldnt move or repose the car cause i didn't have the keys. and this is in a normal boring garage, not the best background for this subject matter... but hope you guys like the pixs)
ps - yes, that's my g35 next to it...sigh.... so sad.... shame....
(please bare in mind, i couldnt move or repose the car cause i didn't have the keys. and this is in a normal boring garage, not the best background for this subject matter... but hope you guys like the pixs)
ps - yes, that's my g35 next to it...sigh.... so sad.... shame....
#5
a magician never tells his secrets... haha... jk
its a little bit of both: camera work as well as post-processing work.
1) i shoot the images digitally first. i always have a rule, 80% of the image's value/substance/or essence should be captured in the original frame. i'm mainly shooting digital right now because of convenience. i'm using both: a canon 10D slr, as well as an older nikon 995.
2) the last 20% is the enhancing work that you can do after the pictures are uploading into the computer. obvious ehancements like: color corrections, sharpening, lighting/saturation, etc. but also more an artistic/individual element: like airbrushing, dynamic lighting, etc. i tend to like my photos very dark, and heavy set. so there's a lot of airbrush and tonal work that goes into it....
hope that helps
its a little bit of both: camera work as well as post-processing work.
1) i shoot the images digitally first. i always have a rule, 80% of the image's value/substance/or essence should be captured in the original frame. i'm mainly shooting digital right now because of convenience. i'm using both: a canon 10D slr, as well as an older nikon 995.
2) the last 20% is the enhancing work that you can do after the pictures are uploading into the computer. obvious ehancements like: color corrections, sharpening, lighting/saturation, etc. but also more an artistic/individual element: like airbrushing, dynamic lighting, etc. i tend to like my photos very dark, and heavy set. so there's a lot of airbrush and tonal work that goes into it....
hope that helps
#7
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#11
well here are some of the magic tricks exposed... i bet its pretty shocking once you see the before and after pictures... haha.... but notice, there is no cropping or change of angles to enhance the original photographs. to "frame" an image i think is the key to taking a good photograph as a foundation to a final image....
#12