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Compiling and Amalgamating

Sometimes I see a beautiful scene that just can’t be captured with a single photograph. The light is wrong so the colors come out weird, or there are branches obstructing important views. So, I take as many photos as possible and then put them together in a rough manner using Photoshop Junior. (Photoshop Elements is the “easy version”, in case you are wondering what Photoshop Junior is.)

One spring morning last year, my neighbor and I were walking on a trail above our houses in Three Rivers. I knew it had the makings of a nice painting, but I only had the inferior camera on my phone, and the light was quite low.

I took all these photos anyway. Each one had something going for it, and I hoped that I could patch them together to capture the moment in a believable manner.

After putzing around on Photoshop Junior, I decided that a square format looked best. Using Photoshop is the modern version of doing a “thumbnail sketch”, something art teachers always insisted on but never explained properly (like much of what was required in art classes, heavy sigh.) It is a way to see if all the elements look good together, are the right sizes and in the right places.

This is more of how I want it to look, but the trail is going the wrong direction.

I made the distant hills larger, emphasized the colors, made sure the hills included the landmark Comb Rocks, placed the trail where I wanted, and filled the foreground with wildflowers.

I finally got the photos to fit together in the best possible way. Here is the final painting, still untitled.

Now that’s what I’m talking about! I wonder why it took me so many years to learn to use my computer this way. Must be slow on the uptake. . . certainly not an early adopter of tech. . . plodding. . .the way I’ve always done it.

3 Comments

  1. I love the composite–you are quite talented at the Photoshop thing. This will be a beautiful painting!

    I used Photoshop Lite back in the day, I think under Windows XP. When Win7 came along, that program was not compatible, alas! So now don’t phiddle with photos at all, since I haven’t found an editing software that is Dummy-Friendly.

    • Sharon, some people say that Canva is a good way to phiddle with photos. Since I paid big bucks for Photoshop twice and now pay for a subscription (just writing those words elevates my blood pressure), I haven’t tried any other options.

      • The whole “subscription” thing drives me nuts, too. They gotcha!

        But thanks for the Canva note. I’ve never heard of it, but will look into that option.


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