Thanks for commenting. What I did is take three time exposures with the camera on a tripod. Then, in Photoshop, I created a new image using the R channel from the first pic, the G channel from the second, and the B channel from the third. Whatever didn't move maintained its natural colors. Whatever moved...well you can see what happened.
I'm an artist, photographer, and graphic designer based in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. Formerly Print Quality Marketing Manager for eleven years at Creo/Kodak. Presented at print technical conferences, trained printers and buyers regarding print quality issues in Europe, N. America, and S.E. Asia. Articles published in trade journals, co-authored TAGA paper on halftone screening, authored BRIDG's guide to halftone screening. Previously Technical Director of Western Canada's largest commercial sheetfed shop. For several years Professor of Digital Graphic Design at Emily Carr University. Former Creative Director at McCann Ericksson Vancouver.
2 comments:
Ethereal. How'd you do that?!
Thanks for commenting. What I did is take three time exposures with the camera on a tripod. Then, in Photoshop, I created a new image using the R channel from the first pic, the G channel from the second, and the B channel from the third. Whatever didn't move maintained its natural colors. Whatever moved...well you can see what happened.
best, gordon p
Post a Comment