Sunday, 20 January 2013

Photomerge

Yay! I finally got back my camera from my cousin just in time to get my picture that I took for this project. I took max of 5 shots on the same spot by overlaying. I wanted it took edit into a panorama shot. So I overlap each edge on repeated things on the past one. 




After that, I found a tutorial on how to merge several continues shots of picture in to a panorama shots.


Rowse, D. (2007) How to Create a Panorama with Photoshop and Photomerge. [online] Available at: http://digital-photography-school.com/creating-a-panorama-with-photoshop-and-photomerge [Accessed: 28 Jan 2013].


So I started the steps. By going to file > automate > photo merge. Then browse all the set of photos. After that, adobe photoshop will help to generate and match all the photos together.



TADAAA!!! I use 5 photos to merge into a panorama photo. Im editing this photo for a house point of view. I took this pictures in a park near my house.


Then, I use clone stamp to clone the grass to cover the walk path and take away the lamp too to make it look like its in the woods and looks natural.


I then set saturation, contrast, brightness according to the look and feel that I want which is to contrast the green more to look natural and nice.


AND THIS IS MY FINAL PIECE. :D


Now is time to edit the bee point of view's picture. It was harder because the picture are all close shots so it was really hard to merge and remember which is which so I browse all the picture and let photoshop to merge for me and it did.


After merging everything, I found the only one image that I could used which is the center wan. So I crop it and move to another page.


Because bee vision have slightly changes from a human and a bee. I did some research on it and I edit it by making the red brighter and bee emphasize on the bud color more then we human do. 

Causes of Color (n.d.) What colors do animals see?. [image online] Available at: http://www.webexhibits.org/causesofcolor/17.html [Accessed: 19 January 2013].



Hanlon, M. (2007) A bees-eye view: How insects see flowers very differently to us . [image online] Available at: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-473897/A-bees-eye-view-How-insects-flowers-differently-us.html [Accessed: 19 January 2013].


Bee could see minimal of yellow but more to red and white. So I edit it into bright red.


Then I overlay bright white on the side.


Walaaahhh. Although it may not be the exact look a of bee view but I did my best to look as close as I could.


Dog pictures are yet still to take. 



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