Posts Tagged ‘Gimp’

Stirring from slumber (Experiments in Post Processing with Gimp)

Friday, July 17th, 2009

After shooting with my 350D for the last two years I am beginning to actually take a look at the tools I have available and fiddle around to see what I can do to enhance or improve my images. This is my first attempt at leveraging Ufraw for strictly white balance and temperature adjustment and Gimp for a tone mapping and color adjustments. For this image I created three layers:

Top = Multiply, 30% Transparency
Middle = Divide, Desaturate-Average, Invert, 50% Transparency
Bottom = Original image

This image is a little noisy because I saved it down for the web to save a couple of pennies with hosting, you can see the original on Flickr (only if we are contacts, I’m still hiding from Orkut).

Trains, Clouds, Graffiti, and Post Work

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

Tagged on Rails

Usually I don’t get bogged down in any post work beyond tweaking contrast and saturation (I love a saturated sky) but this shot was an exception.  I had shot it on my way home from work on a whim, my eye having been draw to it because of the dramatic clouds and the bright and round lettering of the graffiti.  The only problem was a pesky telephone cable that stretched through the center of the picture.  I tried various cloning methods to try and cover it up but eventually settled on some tight cropping and rearranging of the composition.  Here’s the original…

Original Tagged on Rails

Heavy changes but it is balanced a little better sans the telephone poles and cable.  Still learning my way around Gimp, though.  It bugs me that I wasn’t able to really blend in the my pasted area.  :-/

Madame Butterfly with Gimp and Inkscape

Saturday, November 25th, 2006

Management is taking a music appreciation class this semester and one of the assignments this week was to design a promotional poster for an opera. She chose Madame Butterfly, a truly tear-jerking one if there ever was one, and after we sat and sketched out her ideas I plunked myself down in front of the old laptop and fired up Gimp and Inkscape.

She wanted to get across Butterfly’s sense of hope, a hope tied deeply to a notion of renewal, so she decided that cherry blossoms would be the best representative object since they embody spring. We found this low resolution image…

Cherry Blossoms

For Butterfly herself, Management wanted get across the crushing sense of loss that has filled her life since she was a little child. The image of the butterfly was a little better…

Butterfly

With a handful of doodles and these images we worked to piece it together, finally arriving at this…

Madame Butterfly

We used Inkscape to trace the base images to bitmaps and then proceeded to work them over for color, layering, and transparencies alternating between Gimp and Inkscape. The text was generated and layered in Inkscape. Considering neither of us have any graphic design training I’m pretty damn proud with how this came together.