I am having fun with this site. I am proactively going out on shoots with a goal. This week in particular I spent an evening in an collapsing warehouse taking pictures and drinking beer while listening to music. It was great!

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08/05/2002 09:35:59 PM · #82 |
Question!!! Was this weeks challange origionally "Age" I could of swore when I looked last Monday It was "age" and not "Something Old"
* This message has been edited by the author on 8/6/2002 3:46:07 PM. |
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08/05/2002 10:30:23 PM · #83 |
Several people have mentioned adding grain to a photo using editing software. But it does not say that you can add grain using a filter in your editor. It only says you can use one of the sharpen filters and despeckle or a photoshop eauivalent but that is the opposite of grain. I suppose you can use a high ISO but you have no control over that and it looks different then real film grain. Plus, then your original pictures permanently looks grainy. Has there been a change to the rules that I am not aware of?
T |
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08/05/2002 10:35:38 PM · #84 |
Grain or noise in Photoshop is definitely a filter and therefore not allowed (only despeckle and sharpen are allowed filters).
Edit: I should have said all the sharpen filters and obviously unsharpen mask is the best one.
* This message has been edited by the author on 8/5/2002 10:36:34 PM. |
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08/05/2002 10:39:35 PM · #85 |
The area is a little gray here. One the one hand the rules state that you can apply changes as long as they affect the entire image. This would seem to indicate that adding grain via the filter is ok.
But, then again, just a few lines down it says that only sharpen and despeckle are allowed. So it is a bit of a mystery.
You can conjure up a certain amount of grain through "legal" means (though this can be very destructive to your image) by using lots of contrast and sharpening. |
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08/05/2002 10:51:23 PM · #86 |
when they speak of adding grain it is by changing the iso I've been doing that lately (up to 800) it does add a lot of grain.
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08/05/2002 11:00:57 PM · #87 |
mcmurma,
There really is no grey area when it comes to a grain filter in Photoshop. The rules state adjustments are allowed so as long as they affect the whole picture. Adjustments (which are not filters)are the options underneath the Adjustments menu in Photoshop, and are really limited to modifying the color balance, brightness, saturation, and contrast.
99% of the filters out there work on the whole image and by your estimate fall in this grey area-- which is why the rules explicitly state that the only two filters allowed are despeckle and unsharp mask. |
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08/05/2002 11:54:09 PM · #88 |
sohr,
you are right. I stand corrected. Grain is a filter and therefore prohibited.
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08/06/2002 03:47:43 PM · #89 |
Originally posted by taylorbehne: Question!!! Was this weeks challange origionally "Age" I could of swore when I looked last Monday It was "age" and not "Something Old
AmI mistakin? |
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