The Industrial Revolution and the accompanying interchangeable parts brought about many positive changes, but I still like handmade one-of-a-kind things whether they are only a piece of art or something utilitarian. If both, so much the better. This tool box was made years ago by the worker who installed the carpet on which it is sitting. I'm not sure that it has any beauty beyond its functionality and the fact that the tool holders on the side were made from carpet remnants, but I was drawn to it immediately. It seemed to reflect its owner in many ways.
Attachment 160021
Nikon D3s, ISO 400, f/11, five-exposure HDR in 1 EV increments, zoom lens at 40mm
processing highlights
- Because I needed to rotate the image to make the corner of the walls vertical, I lost some width and added canvas on the left side.
- The walls are made of wide pine boards so were distracting. A Belle Fleur texture was used to replace them, and it was warped to flow around the corner.
- Topaz Simplify -- saved watercolor preset
- Alien Skin Snap Art -- saved watercolor wash preset, Hard Light blend mode
- Belle Fleur texture -- (not the same as the previous one) applied over the entire image with different blend modes on two successive layers: Hue, and Linear Burn
- Nik Color Efex -- Tonal Contrast
- Fractalius -- three saved black & white presets; Multiply, Divide, Multiply
- Simplify -- black edges on white, Multiply
- Snap Art -- dark brown edges on white, Multiply
- Alien Skin Exposure -- conversion to B&W (It's becoming my go-to instead of Silver Efex for that.), toning, vignette, and aging effects; applied at slightly reduced opacity to allow just a bit of color from the lower layers to show
- another application of Simplify black edges, Multiply


