-=Floyd's Gallery=- Jaguar XKR-R @ El Capitan

Thanks man, away with Gimp! :lol:

Oh BTW: My very first PS blur :lol:


Another thing, you know when a part of the rim is hidden behind the chassis, right? Do you just use the free transform method on that or any other special techniques?
 
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lookin good bro. the car looks great! ;)👍
to answer ur question, when the rim is behind the chasis, use the same technique to blue but cut out the part where the chasis covers the rim after the blur.
check out my latest update :D
 
U are gettin pro at this mate, hot updates!! On this last update I love that 2nd shot, great camera:) More coming soon...I hope!?
 
Nice man, the blur is nice, although, you could have cut out the car a little better...like on the roof of the car...but its still nice...and your other shots are very nice as well!
 
The first shot looks really chopped, the others not as much, still good work though:tup:

As for ideas, You could try doing license test edits. Like the scalome and whatever else looks good to you
 
Well i think that you have too much blur on those first two, and that sort of blur usualy works better, when the background isnt quite so close to the car, but they are nice angles, and that last pic is beautiful...nice job...if i think of a nice theme, ill let you know...
 
Not bad, I agree the first one is choppy. The second one is much better, it really gives you a sense of speed. The Last one is straight foward but well done. Good job!
 
2nd shot is so cool!! Great camera choice. The last one is great in quality, nice done!
 
Great shots and blur man, makes me feel like I am in the pic being dragged in the back of the car. :dopey:
 
the 2nd and 3rd shots look really good but theres too much green in the picture.
go to color balancing and turn down the green alittle bit and itll look great!
 
Ha, well you just take one picture, copy it, then paste it ontop of the other picture, as a new layer, and just use the eraser tool to erase the parts you dont want, and to blend it, just turn the opacity of the eraser to like something really really low, like 10 or so so it will only erase a tiny bit at a time, that way you can pull off the blending convincingly...
 
And afterwards you combine the 2 layers into 1 image or you just keep things like they are?

So basically, it just:

Open 1 , copy another and paste it into the first one, beside it or above it or whatever, choose eraser tool, set it to 10% strength and erase the strong difference in how the pictures go over in eatch other, right?



Thanks!
 

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