Hoover Auditorium in Lakeside, Ohio, was built (or maybe finished) in 1928 so I'd associated it with American president Herbert Hoover. Not so. It has a connection to Isaac Hoover who patented and sold potato diggers. (Apparently, potato diggers were a big hit; his company was selling 5000 a year by 1916 and was bought by John Deere in 1926.) The seats that haven't yet been refurbished have wooden seats and backs but -- upholstered or not -- I don't think most people pay attention to the seats. It's what's happening on stage is that draws people in and keeps their attention. The lobby was open for a photography exhibit when I walked in one afternoon last August, and the seats caught my attention in a way they hadn't in all the times I'd been there in the past thirteen years.
iPhone 5s, PureShot camera app, ISO 200, iPro Super Wide auxiliary lens, three-exposure HDR in 2 EV increments
processing highlights
- The distortion caused by the lens (intentionally) was augmented a bit with the convex version of the Pinch filter in Photoshop.
- Topaz Simplify -- saved watercolor preset, heavily masked to retain the reflections on the seat arms and backs
- Fractalius -- three saved black-on-white layers; Multiply, Divide, and Multiply blend modes
- Alien Skin Snap Art -- saved watercolor wash preset, Hard Light
- Flypaper texture -- Darker Color blend mode (applied to tone down the brightness of the windows and the reflection on the floor)
- Simplify and Snap Art -- saved black-on-white edges presets, Multiply
- All the layers were stamped, blurred and masked to affect the more distant seats in an arc from the left side to the top.







I love your processing on this one and I actually prefer the OP.

