double paste

© Mary Iacofano

double paste

Uploaded: October 12, 2007 08:19:45

Description

This was a double paste. First I pasted the balloon, then realized it needed a reflection. I then opened the balloon image and under image> rotate>flip image vertical, I used a water paper filter & smudge stick filter on it to look distorted. Then pasted the balloon in the water. I then blended the edges of the balloon to make it look like it was distorted in the water. Without blending the edges it looked very pasted. I used another program (microsoft digital image pro) to blend the edges of the reflective balloon. I probably could of done the edges in Photoshop, but did not know how.
Could you explain how I would of done that in PS?


Exif: F Number: 22, Exposure Bias Value: +0, Exposure Time: 1/40, Flash: flash did not fire, ISO: 100, Focal Length: 28mm, Camera Model: Canon EOS 30D

Comments

Be the first... Sign in and then comment below.

To discuss, first log in or sign up (buttons are at top center of page).

Get Constructive Critiques

Sign up for an interactive online photography course to get critiques on your photos.


 

Did You Know?

Discussions by Category: You can view photo discussions on various themes in the Community > Photo Discussions section of the site.

BetterPhoto Websites: If you see an orange website link directly under the photographer's name, it's totally okay. It's not spam. The reason: BetterPhoto is the one that offers these personal photography websites. We are supporting our clients with those links.

Unavailable EXIF: If there is no other information but 'Unavailable' in the EXIF (meaning no EXIF data exists with the photo), the 'Unavailable' blurb is not displayed. If there is any info, it shows. Many photos have the EXIF stripped out when people modify the image and resave it, before uploading.


 

The following truth is one of the core philosophies of BetterPhoto:

I hear, I forget.
I see, I remember.
I do, I understand.

You learn by doing. Take your next online photography class.


Copyright for this photo belongs solely to Mary Iacofano .
Images may not be copied, downloaded, or used in any way without the expressed, written permission of the photographer.
Log in to follow or message this photographer or report this photo.