@HIRAM I’ve seen various TMOs being used on portraits before, but the result they all have in common is the typical “HDR-look”, unnatural and generally uninteresting because you see that overused look everywhere. Your version is not only natural but also very clear and in my opinion the best here. I wanted to let you know, because you’re doing something very right
Is there any chance you could link to the intermediate Fattal, Mantiuk and Ashikim layers? As separate images or as XCF, doesn’t matter, I’m just very curious to see what you worked with.
I’m curious to know what you think of a second interpretation of mine, processed to bring out more of the fine detail (freckles, etc.) that you seem to prefer.
thanks for the comments, @Morgan_Hardwood Unfortunately I’ve recycled the bits that went into making the image, rats. I utilize this type of layering a lot, so perhaps in a future post I’ll show more details.
here’s my pass at it using rawtherapee and gimp. not totally happy with it, but that’s what I get for experimenting haha! if I had to vote for one so far it would be arctic’s version.
To my taste it’s a bit too uniformly pastel (luminance too low) and a bit too saturated leading to a lack of depth - I used to process portraits like that myself some years ago, but now I ebb towards a less saturated and less bright look.
Rawtherapee + Gimp_G’MIC filters for the illustrative/painting look (several layers, some masking to preserve some detail in freckles ans the sweater hood, and slight touch of dodging of the eye irises).
Rawtherapee with an Ilford Pan F Plus 50 film emulation and tone mapping to bring our the hair detail
A crop to remove redundant space and the logo from the coat, then sent the file to GIMP to ‘heal select’ the knotts in the wood which were catching my eye and distracting from Morgin
20th entry, couldn’t resist those innocent frecks. Mostly gmic and curves within gimp, love the 32 flotating WF but everything’s just too damn slow.Thanks MILC for the milk and everybody else participating
Nice portrait. Didn’t know what to do with it. Decided to give it another go today. Came up with something I didn’t expect. It isn’t even Halloween yet.
1.PhotoFlow → HL mode (blend) → lens correction → linear Rec2020 (no clipping) → 32f 2.gmic → fill unwanted pixels → adjust contrast, brightness (curves; face) → crop → resize (copy) → vignette → WAIT—WHAT? → → make less creepy
good that you gave the soul back to the child, it’s a big reponsabilityto hold a soul… to hold more than one it is a… sssiiiiiinnnn!!! You managed quite nice a version monsieur {hat off, 2/5 of a smile, blade to its sheath}
Morgin_Carpenter_DSC_1922.NEF.xmp (9.3 KB)
A new photo of the young man would be interesting. On the other hand, he might not like the idea. I wouldn’t, in his place, I think.