Brown and yellow duotone, white bits masked off, applied at maybe 70-80% (adjust to taste), lots of grain, very slight vignette. Off the top of my head, without trying it.
Brown and yellow duotone, white bits masked off, applied at maybe 70-80% (adjust to taste), lots of grain, very slight vignette. Off the top of my head, without trying it.
Hello Gary. Thanks for response, good idea for duotone, I will look at this in that perspective. haven't actually heard bout masking off white bits before. Searched for that and didnt get anything, can kindly give some clue about that?
One of my favourite places to take photographs, sadly closed at this time. Here are some previous pictures I hope you may enjoy. If you like these I have some portraits from Beamish here:- Portraits from Beamish I have Indoor scenes from Beamish here:- Beamish Indoor...
Hello Gary. Thanks for response, good idea for duotone, I will look at this in that perspective. haven't actually heard bout masking off white bits before. Searched for that and didnt get anything, can kindly give some clue about that?
If you just use a brown/yellow duotone, the white parts will come out yellow. If you use a program like Photoshop, Gimp, or On1Photo Raw, you can draw a selection around those white parts, invert the selection, and then apply the duotone, and the white parts should stay the same. If you're not sure how to do that you'll want to find a primer on layers and masking. YouTube should have lots of examples.
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