First Attempt at Selective Colorization
Jack'll do
Registered Users Posts: 2,977 Major grins
Thought the colors in this flower lent themselves to this kind of treatment. I'm not sure whether to colorize both flowers or leave it at the one. What do you think?
C&C much appreciated.
Original image
BW Conversion
Final image
Final image edited to remove the OOF leaf
C&C much appreciated.
Original image
BW Conversion
Final image
Final image edited to remove the OOF leaf
0
Comments
A very nice set though
Tim
Thanks for looking. Selective colorizing is a post process technique in which the original image is converted to B&W and then the color is restored to a small portion of the image. The theory is that a small bit of color will draw the viewer's eye.
I should have removed the offending leaf. It does not look good in either B&W or color. I have edited the original post, removing the leaf.
Jack
(My real name is John but Jack'll do)
-Good call to remove the leaf...I'd like to see it with only the top flower in color, and I'm having a tough time deciding whether it works with the selective colorization or not...the all-color version is brilliantly bright, and my eye flows throughout the piece anyway...I'm not sure if you really need to draw in my eye with the selective color.
-DK
www.dank-photo.com
www.dank-photo.blogspot.com
The selective colouring works to a point but the problem is your eyes (well mine at least) are drawn from the coloured flower to the b\w flower and you wonder why is it still in black and white??
Tim
Tim[/QUOTE]
I agree....I'd like to see it with both flowers colored w/ a b/w background.
www.dank-photo.blogspot.com
I find the background wall also a bit distracting here, too. The colorful flowers are excellent, though.
As an aside - the cloning needs to be cleaned up.
GreyLeaf PhotoGraphy