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Sunday, 20 June 2021 11:51

Living with what you saw? Nah, create something you like more!

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On this particular day I was with an old friend visiting Exmouth to get his saxaphone serviced. That was going to take a couple of hours so we headed to the beach to laze around and grab a coffee. While watching the 1000's of people on the beach I saw a guy carring a surf board and I thought, that would make a nice photo. The only problem, there were a lot of people in the frame and since I was only sporting my little Canon G7x ii I was never going to get close enough to him to get rid of the clutter. Was I bothered, not really because I know that I can simply take out the bits I don't like to create what I do like, in this case something resembling a scene reminiscent of On The Beach with Gregory Peck and Ava Gardner. Now, for those that don't know this film, it's based on the novel by Nevil Shute and tells the post-apocalyptic tale of a submarine commander and his men who travel to San Diego in search of survivors. Anyway, a good movie and the basis for my thinking. I'll create my own post-apocalyptic tale of the demise of mankind and wipe out the population spoiling my photo. One of the great tools I have in my arsenal in On1 PhotoRAW and for this job, I know it was going to be perfect.

So, there you have it. What you see doen't always have to be what you live with. If you want something different, change it. Now, to cut a long story short, and remembering the old saying "a picture is worth a thousand words" here's a before and after shot of the 5 minute cleanup and re-stylicsation job that I undertook.

On1 PhotoRAW for those that don't know it is a competitor to Adobe Lightroom and Photoshop. It does a bit of both really so is pretty handy. It's also a lot cheaper and is equally well supported. On1 recently included a natty tool to help clean up such instances on your photos. This acts a little like a clone brush but seems to me at least to be a lot smarter. I use the clone brush a lot but for this cleanup job I knew that this was going to work just fine.

Image copyright

All iimages copyright David Collerton.

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Read 493 times Last modified on Friday, 25 June 2021 12:13

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