Nikolai
Oct-17-2007, 03:11 PM
Reflections almost always create a great add-on to out images.
Unfortunately, sometimes there are no reflective media available.
Imagine a standalone tree in a middle of a field. No glassy office building, no still ponds. Yet you want/need a reflection... :dunno
The poor man approach is simply to flip the image vertically or horizontally. However, the results of such a trick are very easy to identify and usually leave a "cheap" impression.
Why? Because a reflection uses different family of angles.
So our task this week is to try to mimic the actual reflection. To achieve this goal, the following workflow is suggested
find the target
take the primary image
sketch/imagine the path of light that would be engaged by the reflective media (note: wider angle lens most likely will be needed)
take the "mirror point of view" shot
bring both images into your favorite photo editor, flip the "reflection" and blend (note: reflections are often less saturated, dimmed and distorted).Your each entry (one per target, please) should consist of three images:
Primary image (target)
Secondary image (mirror POV)
Resulting blend.Let's get some faux reflections!
Unfortunately, sometimes there are no reflective media available.
Imagine a standalone tree in a middle of a field. No glassy office building, no still ponds. Yet you want/need a reflection... :dunno
The poor man approach is simply to flip the image vertically or horizontally. However, the results of such a trick are very easy to identify and usually leave a "cheap" impression.
Why? Because a reflection uses different family of angles.
So our task this week is to try to mimic the actual reflection. To achieve this goal, the following workflow is suggested
find the target
take the primary image
sketch/imagine the path of light that would be engaged by the reflective media (note: wider angle lens most likely will be needed)
take the "mirror point of view" shot
bring both images into your favorite photo editor, flip the "reflection" and blend (note: reflections are often less saturated, dimmed and distorted).Your each entry (one per target, please) should consist of three images:
Primary image (target)
Secondary image (mirror POV)
Resulting blend.Let's get some faux reflections!