iPhone Photography Tutorials #7 – How To Turn One or More Photos into Minimal Illustrations

I was preparing another image for one of my series and for this purpose I was taking several pictures to choose from among those the ones I would need for it. However, as it often happens, at some point I took another path and I created something different from what I was planning. I like minimal images, but I honestly have little ability for them. The partner in crime says mine is horror vacui, and probably he is right. Anyway, this wasn’t conceived as a minimal picture, but it became one.

Apps needed:
ProCamera
Leonardo
iColorama S
Plastic Bullet
Modern Grunge
Handy Photo
Infinicam Continue reading “iPhone Photography Tutorials #7 – How To Turn One or More Photos into Minimal Illustrations”

How I Did It – iPhoneography Process Study #1 – The Message

I called the following iPhone image “The Message”. It’s a montage of several separate elements, processed multiple times and assembled together. Some simple sketching was done for it as well. I realized only after completing it, that in this piece I expressed some of my admiration for Odilon Redon‘s works. However, the surreal photo montage has a cheeky modern twist to it and Redon would probably find it too mundane… Even though Redon’s illustrations are certainly some of the finest examples of symbolist art so I am not really suggesting we can compare the two, I think I managed to infuse some “mystery” and personal idiosyncrasy into it. I won’t go into subject matter explanations, so I hope you get a “feeling” for it without useless dissertations.

The Message
Apps used: Camera+, Sketch Club, Handy Photo, Photoshop Touch, Moku Hanga, Portrait Painter, Glaze, Image Blender, Mextures, Rays, Film Lab, Vsco Cam.

Even though the partner in crime is not happy with having cameras pointed at him, he kindly let me take a photo of him in a totally tiny, narrow, deserted dead-end alley, where a bench was curiously placed on the dead end’s side (you gotta love Lisbon’s absurd urban configuration). Even though nobody was in sight and as far as I know the place could have been abandoned for years, going in to take a photo felt very much like intruding. I wanted to use the image badly, but I promised the model not to make it an environmental portrait of some sort… I had to change the original image more than just a little for achieving this.

Now, for how got I there… Continue reading “How I Did It – iPhoneography Process Study #1 – The Message”

iPhone Photography Tutorials #6 – How To Create Sci-Fi Art In A Few Steps

I don’t know why I’m being so sci-fi oriented lately. We had another article with space influences just a few weeks ago. This time I intend to be pragmatic, so I am turning my space idyll into a tutorial. Perhaps you were going to have ice-cream and you don’t want to waste your time on it. After all, who cares about Stanislaw Lem? He’s dead. And if he weren’t, he wouldn’t be happy about his involvement in this at all. But even if you have never read anything by Lem, you could still find this tutorial useful, so read on.

8654
8654

Apps needed:
Camera+, Handy Photo, Superimpose, Snapseed, Alien Sky, Path On, Mextures Continue reading “iPhone Photography Tutorials #6 – How To Create Sci-Fi Art In A Few Steps”

When Apps Take Over: The Genesis of Moons

Some days you are applying yourself to a specific project and everything you come up with looks invariably wrong. It’s not that your image will look bad per se, but the feeling is things are just not what you are after, and you cannot understand when and how you took a wrong turn. It’s like with trying to fix a spoiled recipe (cookery is another serious business and an art in its own right): if the dough is not rising and you cannot figure out why, it’s time to take a break and focus on something else. Gardening or knitting perhaps—good luck with these two.

M00n
M00N

Some time ago I started a series of pictures with thematic and visual affinity. At some point I got stuck and couldn’t go on Continue reading “When Apps Take Over: The Genesis of Moons”