Now, don't just drop and run. Tell us how you created it, what needed fixing to put it up here or if it was purely one of those lucky right spot right time things.
Original shot was taken at an antique store. I had to fix up the noise and create a more graphic look, remove the background etc. This goes well with the vintage telephone ring tone that everyone over 60 seems to like.
Greetings JC a very good discussion.....my stunning image of "Sunflower Sunny Yellow" was taken with my android years back. It has been featured in various groups here at FAA America like so many of my images they are one shot. Not once did I ever consider any of my photos lucky, I know I nailed it the moment I look through the view finder. IMy image was taken at the local organic food market held every Saturday. I did not have my camera which is a rare event for me. Just months ago the local newspaper editor contacted me and informed me they were featuring me my photo in the local newspaper with photo credits. They credited me twice in the Home and Garden section. The editor of the local newspaper also informed me out of the thousands they had in their photo archives my photo was stunning and beautiful image it pops out at the viewer.
It was a 6 pixel HTC cell phone and at the right depth of field it is amazing the quality. You mention if anything was done, there was a slight enhancement on yellow. Otherwise anyone suggest that tiny lens on a cell can not produce a quality image they are wrong? The only and only photo shop software I have ever used was Picasa.
I always come across in my thousand of images over 54 years a particular negative and either camera settings or processing the image just did not appear as it should. I have then taken that same image and use manually adjusted to makel corrections. You do get a clearer understanding if you process your own color images and color correct the Yellow, Magenta, Blue and filters. I happened to work as film processor for the 1984 New Orleans Worlds Fair at an official film processing shop on the site. Tourist an locals would come into shop and get their film developed and if they wanted were able to transform their images to postcards.. Years ago Eckerd Drugs had one hour processing and at times needed a print pronto and relied on them. Besides the two for one prints there photo processing equipment were exceptional and on the mark.
Cell phone camera are ideal for a close up macro images.
Cheers, Michael Hoard Principal Actor, Artist, Photographer and Writer
Taken with my Galaxy S5. I almost never use cell phone shots here but the condition on the Charles River in Boston were really unique here. We had a big warm up causing the ice on the river to melt rapidly - unfortunately I didn't have my Sony RX100 or DSLR on me to capture it. I really didn't do anything special with this photo - I edited it like any other photo.
An interesting discussion JC!
This truck was captured with my I-phone while on a cycling ride in the Smokies, then edited in Lightroom and Photoshop for contrasting and Saturation. The truck was added into the foggy farm scene, captured a few years ago with my 18 megapixel 7D Canon. The phone does a great job in even lighting although the files are a bit small, so added into a nice 5000+ pixel image, the result makes a wonderfully printable image up to 5 feet.
Enjoy your weekend everyone!
Celebrate life, Debra
My galaxy 2 finally died and instead of buying another expensive iphone or galaxy I bought an unlocked Motorola E and it looks like this camera is better than the old galaxy one. So, I may start taking more photos with it. Nothing fancy. NO flash.
The process of clicking a picture is different! You’ll see a circle floating on the screen. This is the exposure circle. You can drag it around the screen and the exposure state of the shot will change. When you’ve got a desirable shot, tap anywhere on the screen to capture it.
I would love to see something like this on dlsr cameras instead of going into menu and fiddling around with focus points. Just drag the focal point to where you want it.
Oh, I get it. This is not about images that would look good on cell phone cases . . . it's about images that we have for sale that were taken with a cell phone.
None from me. My cell phone doesn't have a camera :(
I took this with an iPhone 5S while on a tour of the Tongass National Forest in Alaska. I was on a vehicle going through the forest on a wet and foggy afternoon.
I have taken a good number of images with an iphone 4 and then edited them directly using apps like Be Funky and King Camera now if i were going to consider selling these as art in the way of prints,and so on then a great deal work would be neededin order for my iphone images to become sellable
Saying that the image below called Urban City was created from the original colour photo taken with an iPhone and then edited with Snapseed
further postwork was done with photoshop/gimp
Taken back in October of 2014 at Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky, camping with my grandsons. I used with my 8 year old MotoRazr phone (1.3mp camera), which I still use today as my personal phone, and it still uses the original battery. Once I Bluetoothed it to my computer I processed it using LR3, PS CS5, and applied a painterly-type effect in Topaz.
Color and B/W versions:
Grandsons playing. Taken same day at Mammoth Cave Nat'l Park: (this one needs some work imo, but I still like it :) )
My wife's Galaxy S4 takes really nice shots, and my DSLR I left at home, so I used what I had with me. :)
I took this intentionally in low light with my uhhhh... iPhone 4S I think it was, because I wanted a certain amount of noise. Got exactly what I was after, I love this image.
I have taken some pretty phenomenal iPhone macros using an Olloclip, too. Worth every penny, especially if you're working in tight spaces where a big DLSR is cumbersome.
This one started as a doodle sketch on a paper pad, then i ending up liking it so much that i took a picture with my nexus, then tweaked the color and lighting in PS.