Oberlin is a small-town gem in north-central Ohio. The Monroe House, built in 1866, is now part of the Oberlin Heritage Society. It originally belonged to General Giles Shurtleff who lead the first African-American regiment from Ohio that fought in the Civil War. For a time afterwards, it was the home of James and Julia Monroe. He was an abolitionist and advocate of voting rights for African-Americans, a professor at Oberlin College, a member of the US House of Representatives, and a US Consul to Rio de Janeiro. This stairway to an open hall on the second floor is in that house.
iPhone 5s, PureShot camera app, ISO 200, three-shot HDR in 2 EV increments, iPro Super Wide auxiliary lens
processing highlights
- Most of the intentional distortion of the stairway is from the wide angle lens, but it was augmented with the fisheye option in Edit>Transform>Warp.
- Topaz Simplify -- saved watercolor preset
- Alien Skin Snap Art -- saved watercolor wash preset, Hard Light blend mode
- Nik Silver Efex for conversion to black & white
- Fractalius -- three saved black-on-white presets; Multiply, Divide, Multiply
- Snap Art and Simplify -- saved black-on-white edges presets, Multiply
- Accented Edges filter -- masked off lower right
- Nik Color Efex -- Pastel and Darken/Lighten Center (used to darken the center, probably for the first time), partially masked off the bottom
- Belle Fleur vintage frame texture with a clipped Black & White adjustment layer
- Nik Analog Efex -- to add some character









