After watching this tomato (on a potted plant) ripen, I waited for a still morning to photograph it. The image was made up of 18 shots -- three bracketed shots at six focus-stacking intervals. Six wasn't enough; I wanted the background out of focus, but not those foreground leaves. After it was processed, it reminded me so much of an old fruit crate label, I added the text and the plane. The plane is a Ford Tri-Motor. They were nicknamed the tin goose, and coincidentally one fully-restored one and one partially-restored one reside at an airfield about ten miles away on the Marblehead Peninsula in Ohio. Blue Goose Growers of California was one of the companies that shipped fruit in crates with colorful labels in the first half of the last century.
Nikon D3s, ISO 200, f/5.6, three-exposure HDRs at 1 EV intervals, 105mm macro lens
processing highlights
- Zerene Stacker -- focus stacking
- Flypaper Texture -- a blurred layer replaced the non-tomato-plant parts of the background
- Topaz Simplify -- saved watercolor preset
- Alien Skin Snap Art -- saved watercolor wash preset, Color blend mode, 33%
- Flypaper Texture -- Linear Light, 33%
- Fractalius -- three saved black & white presets, Multiply, one masked, various opacities
- Snap Art -- saved Stylized Line Art b&w preset, Multiiply, 23%
- Simplify -- saved b&w edges preset, Multiply, 60%


