Praying Mantis

Check out these file upload filter images:

Praying Mantis
file upload filter

Image by light2shine
This mantid was a cooperative subject, although he kept trying to climb onto the lens of my Sony cybershot (did he see his reflection?). I held him up high in the bright noonday sun so that a subdued background of shade trees and sky would provide good bokeh. Got the sharpest images, like this one, when I ignored my camera’s LCD and viewfinder eyepiece and just eyeballed my subject by trying to point the center of the lens at the mantid’s head. Shot in highest-res jpeg, "Save As" a TIFF file in Photoshop CS, increased saturation very slightly (Hue/Saturation > Master), Select All > Filter > Unsharp Mask (tweaked settings there), cropped (about 1/6th of original composition), "Save As" jpeg file, upload to Flickr.

Media Chooser
file upload filter

Image by Yandle
All labels can change depending on context, e.g. ‘choose image’ changes to ‘choose audio file’ depending on how the dialog was initiated.

Examples of Photoshop Artistic and Brush Stroke Filter Effects
file upload filter

Image by Boogies with Fish
www.messersmith.name/wordpress/2009/11/16/examples-of-pho…
This one is going to make you wonder. My primary graphics arts workstation recently turned belly-up and went "pop". When rebuilding it, I discovered, to my dismay, that I’d lost a few folders because I did not have them clicked for backup. Horrors!  A SYSADMIN lost some files – not supposed to happen. Especially his own files!

There was nothing that I couldn’t easily replace. One of them was a folder of example Photoshop filter effects. I like to keep a folder filled with example filter effects applied to an image with which I’m familiar. Still-life type images work best, because they’re simple and usually have a variety of textures and colours. I wanted one that included a graphics art image and a photograph. I remembered a post that I did a long time ago which included an image that I shot in a gun shop (ironic, eh?). The place was a real loony bin – Don’s Guns in Indianapolis. Here’s the original post and here’s the original image:

I’ll show you a few full-sized image of some of the interesting filters. Here’s one called Plastic Wrap: It has the creepy effect on this image of making it look as if it’s all tucked away in an evidence bag. "Yeah, Jordan. The gun and the book are all bagged up here for you."

This one is called Sponge, like in, "Who shot Sponge Bob Squarepants?" Look, it’s got his blood all over it.

Except it should be yellow, I suppose.

This one is Rought Trade. No, wait! I got that wrong. It’s Rough Pastels.  Big difference!

Looks like a very useful filter for fruits. I remember eating a watermelon once (not the whole thing) which had been carefully injected over a period of a week with a fifth of vodka. Everything looked pretty much like the image above. It’s not an excercise that I recommend unless you have your sweet tooth well under supervision.

Anyway, here is a gallery some more of the more useful Artistic and Brush Stroke filters applied to the image:

I had to trade off my Walther P-38 for an Indian Arms piece in stainless steel. The Walther rusted like a pig. I was forever cleaning it.

I don’t have a gun any more. I carry my trusty Canon G9 in my holster on my belt. I figure that, if I absolutely must, I can club a guy unconscious with it and then take his picture.

It’s that tough!

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