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JulieLawsonPhotography
Jul-19-2008, 04:03 AM
It seems that using texture on photographs is everywhere. I love this technique. If done right it just seems to make a special photograph, even more special. I don't know, but I love it.
Here is a photograph of a teeter-totter that is next door to my sisters house. From what I've heard, this was the actual teeter-totter that this neighbors kids used to play on and this neighbor is in her upper 80's? I'm not sure, but I know that this thing is old.
http://JulieLawsonPhotography.smugmug.com/photos/334000971_2gLuE-L.jpg
http://JulieLawsonPhotography.smugmug.com/photos/334001176_YwPAD-L.jpg
http://JulieLawsonPhotography.smugmug.com/photos/334343862_SdTUh-L.jpg

Jermbubba
Jul-19-2008, 04:56 AM
Great work! I really enjoy the 2nd and the last! Care to explain a bit of your technique ? :P

JulieLawsonPhotography
Jul-19-2008, 05:20 AM
Great work! I really enjoy the 2nd and the last! Care to explain a bit of your technique ? :P

On the last photograph, I used Pioneer Woman's soft and faded action on it. Then flickr has free textures. I just found one that I liked and layered it over the image. I think I may have put it as an overlay instead of the normal. I don't know what that section is called where you can choose this, but it's in the layers section of cs3. Sometimes I reduce the opacity of the textured layer, sometimes I don't. I just play with it until I get a result that I like. Hope that helps. :D

InsuredDisaster
Jul-19-2008, 05:46 PM
On the last photograph, I used Pioneer Woman's soft and faded action on it. Then flickr has free textures. I just found one that I liked and layered it over the image. I think I may have put it as an overlay instead of the normal. I don't know what that section is called where you can choose this, but it's in the layers section of cs3. Sometimes I reduce the opacity of the textured layer, sometimes I don't. I just play with it until I get a result that I like. Hope that helps. :D

It does.


I know that some photographers perhaps don't want others to talk about how they do their cool shots, but if you do something obvious PS, then its great when you talk about it. Thanks so much!

canon400d
Jul-19-2008, 06:31 PM
It does.


I know that some photographers perhaps don't want others to talk about how they do their cool shots, but if you do something obvious PS, then its great when you talk about it. Thanks so much!

I have CS3 and I have a fair idea on working a lot of things but I don't know the procedure for the texture one you are on about. It may be too involved to tell me on here. I keep getting Canon the PhotoPlus magazine and every month they have great tutorials, so one day it may appear.
Regards
Bob

Dogdots
Jul-19-2008, 08:33 PM
I have CS3 and I have a fair idea on working a lot of things but I don't know the procedure for the texture one you are on about. It may be too involved to tell me on here. I keep getting Canon the PhotoPlus magazine and every month they have great tutorials, so one day it may appear.
Regards
Bob

I play with the filters in CS3 and I haven't seen something like this in there, but I could be missing something :scratch

I was playing with a photo using the waterpaper filter and messed around with the fiber length, but didn't get something as nice as whats in the last photo posted.

JulieLawsonPhotography
Jul-19-2008, 10:39 PM
If you go to the Flickr website, type in free textures. This is where I got the texture that you see in my photos. They are free to download and you save them to your computer. It kind of looks like mini-wallpaper and you may have to scale it to the size of the photograph. Once you resize the texture, then you can reduce the opacity of it to see your original photograph. :D

InsuredDisaster
Jul-20-2008, 04:10 AM
If you go to the Flickr website, type in free textures. This is where I got the texture that you see in my photos. They are free to download and you save them to your computer. It kind of looks like mini-wallpaper and you may have to scale it to the size of the photograph. Once you resize the texture, then you can reduce the opacity of it to see your original photograph. :D


Wow, simple but effective! Thanks a million.

Dogdots
Jul-20-2008, 08:12 AM
If you go to the Flickr website, type in free textures. This is where I got the texture that you see in my photos. They are free to download and you save them to your computer. It kind of looks like mini-wallpaper and you may have to scale it to the size of the photograph. Once you resize the texture, then you can reduce the opacity of it to see your original photograph. :D

Thanks Julie :thumb

But when I checked out the textures for downloading some are listed as "for non-commerical use" or licenced. This is a dumb question, but can they be used on a photo and sold?

JulieLawsonPhotography
Jul-20-2008, 09:50 AM
Thanks Julie :thumb

But when I checked out the textures for downloading some are listed as "for non-commerical use" or licenced. This is a dumb question, but can they be used on a photo and sold?

That part I'm not sure of. I have never put them on any that I've sold. I would imagine that we would probably have to ask the creator of the texture. If they say no, then...:dunno

That's a good question, though.