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Subject : Re: [Anaglyphs] Tree Fungi Growth [Brian]
From : "Duke stereospace(-at-)gmail.com [anaglyphs]"
To : anaglyphs Yahoo
Date : Wed, 18 Feb 2015 03:49:17 -0500


 

I like this version...it has kind of a more natural look with the actual background behind it.  My subjective treatment may have been to move the whole scene a little closer to the window, and then darken the whole background to about the same or less brightness as the tree.  As I said, just my subjective opinion.

Duke

On Wed, Feb 18, 2015 at 3:36 AM, Brian Wallace Starg82343(-at-)hotmail.com [anaglyphs] <anaglyphs(-at-)yahoogroups.com> wrote:
 

Thanks for commenting Duke.  Here is the original "aligned" image with the background (I kept in case).


Cheers,
Brian

My photos according to "Interestingness"... http://fiveprime.org/hivemind/Tags/Brian,Wallace,3d



To: anaglyphs(-at-)yahoogroups.com
From: anaglyphs(-at-)yahoogroups.com
Date: Wed, 18 Feb 2015 03:15:57 -0500
Subject: Re: [Anaglyphs] Tree Fungi Growth [Brian]



That's what I commonly think of as a shelf fungus.  You did a very nice job on the extraction and clean up.  I would be curious, though, to see the original background.

Duke

On Wed, Feb 18, 2015 at 3:09 AM, Brian Wallace Starg82343(-at-)hotmail.com [anaglyphs] <anaglyphs(-at-)yahoogroups.com> wrote:
 

I'm pretty much assuming this thing growing on one of my trees is a form of fungi.  I don't really know for sure since it's like wood and grows along with the tree.  It doesn't decay like a mushroom would.  If there's another name for it, I don't know what it is.  I've been watching it grow now for maybe 7 to 10 years.  It originally was not on the tree but I've noticed now that squirrels like to sit on it.

The other day when we had some snow and I went outside to see what I could find interesting to photograph, I walked by it and noticed a little snow laying on the top of it so I took a little cha cha.

I didn't care much for the slightly out of focus background and to be honest, the alignment seemed off somehow.  I extracted the background by selecting it and painting it black.  I then touched up the edges through SPM's clone toll at the correct depths around the growth and tree trunk that was left a little off through the PS selection process between the two chips.

Finally, I realized I didn't care that much for how the alignment looked close up on the subject and cloned the whole fungi growth to tighten the alignment up a bit.

The crossview version will show less depth perception than the anaglyph of course and the lack of other depth elements in the background (or foreground) will not help this illusion either but I believe this is better than leaving the original background in, which was too far away to have individual depth elements and as I mentioned was not completely in focus with DOF.


Nikon D600, Wide-angle zoom lens, PS-CS6, ACR, SPM, IrfanView.

Cheers,
Brian

My photos according to "Interestingness"... http://fiveprime.org/hivemind/Tags/Brian,Wallace,3d




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3D info:  SPM, Photoshop.
 





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3D info:  SPM, Photoshop.
 

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Posted by: Duke <stereospace(-at-)gmail.com>
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