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2010-07-07
, 23:00
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Posts: 44 |
Thanked: 186 times |
Joined on Apr 2010
@ Worthing, West Sussex, England
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#102
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The Following User Says Thank You to fieldofcows For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-07-08
, 04:11
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Posts: 10 |
Thanked: 2 times |
Joined on May 2010
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#103
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2010-07-08
, 05:22
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Posts: 3,159 |
Thanked: 2,023 times |
Joined on Feb 2008
@ Finland
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#104
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ummm, how do we actually vote?
I was looking for that once but was too lazy so i gave up before i found it :-)
The Following User Says Thank You to ossipena For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-07-08
, 07:06
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Posts: 44 |
Thanked: 186 times |
Joined on Apr 2010
@ Worthing, West Sussex, England
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#105
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The Following User Says Thank You to fieldofcows For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-07-21
, 19:49
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Posts: 44 |
Thanked: 186 times |
Joined on Apr 2010
@ Worthing, West Sussex, England
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#106
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2010-09-03
, 15:56
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Posts: 3 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Sep 2010
@ Switzerland
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#107
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2010-09-05
, 05:33
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Posts: 10 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
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#108
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2010-09-11
, 14:48
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Posts: 10 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
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#109
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2010-10-03
, 08:48
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Posts: 71 |
Thanked: 54 times |
Joined on Jun 2010
@ Malaysia
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#110
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Not sure if it's something you've already considered or added (hard to tell by the pics) but I gave a photo a vintage effect for an ad I did yesterday, and found that the lens effect in photoshop has an option to correct the colour bleed.
Here's the original:
If you look at the following pic (which is obviously after the processing) you'll see that by applying this effect (which as far as I can tell is maybe achieved by splitting the pic into 4 colours, zooming them all to a slightly different degree and then overlaying them) and then I added a tiny bit of zoom blur.
This gives what you can see - the centre of the image is fine and in focus, but towards the edge the colours start to bleed and the image starts to become blurry. Then I applied a vignette around the edge...