Wow! I would have never thought of that as a source of what I was seeing! Thank
you, Sonny, I’ll add that to the inventory of effects to consider in the
future. Again, great image.
Best regards,
Peter Stevens
On Oct 28, 2018, at 1:58 PM, Sonny Carter <sonc.hegr@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Peter, sorry about the truncated answer. I was turning off my phone for
church. The effect you see was caused by a fog machine blowing between the
front subjects and the bkgd. I was pretty much doing the same stuff as
usual with Photoshop.
Sonny Carter
http://www.SonC.com/look ;<http://www.sonc.com/look>
On Oct 28, 2018, at 10:34 AM, Sonny Carter <sonc.hegr@xxxxxxxxx
<mailto:sonc.hegr@xxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
Smoke generator
Sonny Carter
http://www.SonC.com/look ;<http://www.sonc.com/look>
On Oct 28, 2018, at 9:34 AM, Peter Stevens (Redacted sender "fritzj3" for
DMARC) <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>>
wrote:
Wow! A coven on the Cane! …and with tunes, no less. Cool!
Nicely captured, Sonny. Got a question about the image’s appearance,
though. What software do you use for processing the images? The
boundary/border between the background and the ladies profiles/silhouettes
just seem very abruptly set out from the background. It's like there are
two images that were perfectly set upon one another - one with the dancers
and then one with everything else. I’m not nay--saying the image at all, I
really like it; but I’m trying to understand why the image appears like it
does, whether its on my end in the monitor or whether its just how the Sony
sensor captures and processes the resulting image.
Best regards,
Peter Stevens
On Oct 28, 2018, at 9:40 AM, Sonny Carter <sonc.hegr@xxxxxxxxx
<mailto:sonc.hegr@xxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
More fun than it sounds.
https://sonc.com/look/?p=6153 ;<https://sonc.com/look/?p=6153>
SonC
--
Regards,
Sonny
http://sonc.com/look/ ;<http://sonc.com/look/>
Natchitoches, Louisiana
1714
Oldest Permanent Settlement in the Louisiana Purchase
USA