I love how these things change with a slightly different choice of the initial crop. Posted one a while back of a dahlia; this one is a hydrangea.
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I love how these things change with a slightly different choice of the initial crop. Posted one a while back of a dahlia; this one is a hydrangea.
Diane, this turned out fabulous! When you first posted this technique I turned all kinds of images into spheres. It was so much fun to see what they turn into! Beautiful rich shades of pink in this one and good interesting interior lines swirling, stretching and blending.
I'm always fascinated by these. This one goes well beyond that, though. The lines and tonal range are wonderful.
Diane,
Greetings. A beautiful globe. Having written that I thought what about a drop shadow?
Attachment 145926
Multiply blend copy with elliptical marquee tool in PS, transformed to taste, masked
Just a thought...
Cheers,
-Michael-
Despite seeing "sphere" in the title and in Nancy's comment, I didn't see the image as a sphere. Didn't even think of it. The visual clues I see made it look concave. That changed somewhat with the shadow. Now it sort of looks spherical. Maybe it's the skull/lady-in-the-mirror thing again.
With the dropped shadow it appears to me to be a colorful marble rolling!
Fun idea, Michael! I'll play with it when I get time! Of course, a shadow should soften a little as it is farther from the object... That's easy to do.
OK -- couldn't resist playing. It's quick and dirty but all I have time for. And now that I see the light illuminating the inside of the sphere, it should be on the other side!
OK. (I see a hollowed-out sphere, too.) And I think I should push the end of the shadow back, as the light is coming a little from the front. Easy to do as it's on its own layer and can be distorted however I like. But I'm going to bed now....
Beautiful graphic image. Love the colors and feeling of spinning.