1 Attachment(s)
Underground Railroad monument
Although it wasn't known as the Underground Railroad until about 30 years before the American Civil War, the networks of people who helped fugitive slaves escape to the northern United States and to Canada was in place long before that. Many tens of thousands are thought to have successfully made it to freedom. A considerable number escaped through he state of Ohio, which bordered the slave states of Virginia and Kentucky. (It wasn't until two years after the start of the Civil War that the people of the western part of Virginia seceded from the Confederacy and the territory became West Virginia.) The progressive town of Oberlin was a hub on the Underground Railroad. Many of its residents not only actively helped fugitive slaves in their journey but in one well-documented event before the Civil War a group of townspeople and students at Oberlin College actually freed a captured slave from Federal authorities who were transorting him to his owner in the South and helped him escape to Canada. It resulted in the arrest of the rescuers and the indictment of 37 of them. In 1977, as part of a student project, a senior at Oberlin College designed the monument, which was erected at the college, and his class raised money to preserve and maintain it.
Attachment 161184
Nikon D3s, ISO 1600, f/16, 1/25 sec, zoom lens at 14mm
processing highlights
- The background is a copy of an Underground Railroad map that was published in the late nineteenth century. It was dirtied, torn, and otherwise modified with three layers of Flypaper textures (two of them the same texture but different blend modes and opacities).
- The monument was flipped horizontally and transformed in several ways. Its outline on a separate layer was filled with black and further transformed to make the shadow.
- Topaz Simplify -- saved watercolor preset, masked off the monument
- Alien Skin Snap Art -- saved watercolor wash preset, Hard Light blend mode
- Fractalius -- three saved black-on-white presets; Multiply (masked off the monument), Divide, Multiply
- Simplify and Snap Art -- saved black-on-white edges presets, Multiply
- The light burst at the top was done with Red Giant's Knoll Light Factory