Photograph By Jan Symank
Jan S.
Photograph By mike cable
mike c.
Photograph By James Hager
James H.
Photograph By Srna Stankovic
Srna S.
Photograph By Barbara Socor
Barbara S.
Photograph By Brian E. Chilson
Brian E. C.
Photograph By Radovan Magdalenic
Radovan M.
Photograph By Jan Symank
Jan S.
 
imageopolis Home Sign Up Now! | Log In | Help  

Your photo sharing community!

Your Photo Art Is Not Just A Fleeting Moment In Social Media
imageopolis is dedicated to the art and craft of photography!

Upload
your photos.  Award recipients are chosen daily.


Editors Choice Award  Staff Choice Award  Featured Photo Award   Featured Critique Award  Featured Donor Award  Best in Project Award  Featured Photographer Award  Photojournalism Award

Imageopolis Photo Gallery Store
Click above to buy imageopolis
art for your home or office
.
 
  Find a Photographer. Enter name here.
    
Share On
Follow Us on facebook 

 


Send this photo as a postcard
Abyss Pool
 
Send this image as a postcard
  
Image Title:  Abyss Pool
  0
Favorites: 0 
 By: Michael Kanemoto  
  Copyright ©2004

Register or log in to view this image at its full size, to comment and to rate it.


This photo has won the following Awards




 Projects & Categories

 Browse Images
  Recent Pictures
  Todays Pictures
  Yesterdays Pictures
  Summary Mode
  All imageopolis Pictures
 
 Award Winners
  Staff Choice
  Editors Choice
  Featured Donors
  Featured Photographers
  Featured Photos
  Featured Critiques
   
 Image Options
  Unrated Images
  Critique Only Images
  Critiquer's Corner
  Images With No Critiques
  Random Images
  Panoramic Images
  Images By Country
  Images By Camera
  Images By Lens
  Images By Film/Media
   
 Categories
   
 Projects
   
 Find Member
Name
User ID
 
 Image ID
ID#
 
   
 Search By Title
 
   

Photographer Michael Kanemoto  Michael Kanemoto {Karma:22115}
Project #18 Beneath Your Feet Camera Model Nikon D70
Categories Landscape
Nature
Travel
Film Format
Portfolio Yellowstone
Lens Nikon  18-70mm f/3.5-4.5G IF-ED AF-S DX
Uploaded 10/21/2004 Film / Memory Type 2.0 GB IBM Microdrive
    ISO / Film Speed 0
Views 497 Shutter
Favorites Aperture f/
Critiques 6 Rating
Pending
/ 0 Ratings
Location City - 
State -  WYOMING
Country - United States   United States
About Abyss Pool, Yellowstone National Park. I love this pool. I can remember seeing the tree in the bottom 23 years ago.
Random Pictures By:
Michael
Kanemoto


Henbit i

Harbingers

Magnolia

umbrella

Leaf I

Lily v

Arch

About Face

Memorial Day

Mt. Holmes, Dome Mountain

There are 6 Comments in 1 Pages
  1
Michael Kanemoto Michael Kanemoto   {K:22115} 1/14/2005
As green as the water... The tree has probably been there for much longer than 20 some years, perhaps over a hundred years.

The things kids remember...

  0


Ian McIntosh Ian McIntosh   {K:42997} 1/14/2005
Tremendous work here. That tree still green?

  0


Hugo de Wolf Hugo de Wolf   {K:185110} 10/22/2004
Hi Michael, Thanks for your offer and elaborate reply. Interesting to see what you did. Quite elaborate PS work, and well handled... Impossible to tell from this (size) shot!

Thanks for the offer, I really appreciate it, but I like to think I'm quite adept at PS myself. The only thing I struggled with (that comes to mind) is the illumination on the church in http://www.usefilm.com/image/532767.html... You were right about that, I should've spent some more time on it. If you scroll down, you'll see the original images...)

Cheers,

Hugo

  0


Michael Kanemoto Michael Kanemoto   {K:22115} 10/22/2004
Here is what happened:

Each of these areas were masked seperately and the levels (contrast and brightness) adjusted:
- Sky
- Background hills and lake
- Ground behind the pool
- The pool
- The foreground in front of the pool

Most of the changes you see were from those adjustments.

I then saturated the entire image to make the digital seem more like the film I'm used to.

I then masked the pool with a wide feather (large gradient) and desaturated. This means the color is subtly less intense as you radiate outward from the pool. It was a really slight adjustment. I could have just saturated the pool with the same effect.

If you want to partner up on a photograph you have taken some time, let me know. mkanemoto at gmail dot com

  0


Hugo de Wolf Hugo de Wolf   {K:185110} 10/22/2004
Hi Michael, I agree the desaturation has been much more subtly applied (barely noticable, if you hadn't told me...) Hope you didn't misread my comment, It's not an issue of "freaking out", jsut venting my thoughts.

I like what you done to the image; but looking at the metamorphosis you posed, I would say it's a saturation step; did you locally desaturise it? (Presumably the sea and land strip in the backgroun, but that's only a guess) What technique did you use? Masking it, and copying it to a new layer? Just curious here...

Cheers,

Hugo

  0


Michael Kanemoto Michael Kanemoto   {K:22115} 10/21/2004
For Howard M. Parsons, who wanted an example of one of my photographs, before and after Photoshop. Voila.

  0



  1

 

|  FAQ  |  Terms of Service  |  Donate  |  Site Map  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise  |

Copyright ©2013 Absolute Internet, Inc - All Rights Reserved

Elapsed Time:: 0.21875