Author | Thread |
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02/25/2007 10:25:53 AM · #1 |
Take a look at these :
Flowers scanned |
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02/25/2007 10:32:19 AM · #2 |
Wow, these are great. I was expecting a bunch of flattened flowers. How did they get them to not look smashed? |
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02/25/2007 10:58:06 AM · #3 |
Originally posted by jahoward: Wow, these are great. I was expecting a bunch of flattened flowers. How did they get them to not look smashed? |
By doing something that would get you into trouble
in the bathroom. They left the lid up. ;)
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02/25/2007 11:21:06 AM · #4 |
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02/25/2007 11:30:36 AM · #5 |
Originally posted by fir3bird: Originally posted by jahoward: Wow, these are great. I was expecting a bunch of flattened flowers. How did they get them to not look smashed? |
By doing something that would get you into trouble
in the bathroom. They left the lid up. ;) |
You can line a shallow cardboard box (like from soda cans) with white, black, or colored paper to make a top for the scanner which will exclude extraneous light/objects but not flatten your subject.
This sculpture was assembled and shot on a scanner (seven years ago!), with additional elements composited-in with Photoshop.
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02/25/2007 12:02:57 PM · #6 |
Here is one I did last year...
The inspiration came from: //www.katinkamatson.com/ |
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02/25/2007 02:24:13 PM · #7 |
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