Well, it was quite easy. I took a picture of my room, with no initial intention of getting to where it got. Then I saw that the window aperture in the picture was almost of a rectangular shape. I rotated the image to compensate for horizon misalignment, then I removed the portion of the image with the window view. I resized the image to fit the low resolution nuclear blast picture I got from a randm googled site. I inserted it a a bottom layer, blended the 2 in 1 image, applied a noise filter to the whole thing and... that was it. :)
The idea is very good. But I would suggest a bit more work on the part where the nuclear blast photo meets the window edge. It looks a bit like a wallpaper applied in the window frame. Gratz! :)
Well, it is just a layer pasted in. And to make the transition ease out a applied a noise filter. It could use some blurring along the edges of the 2 photos.
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Nice view on the second one. How did you do it? ('cause I don't believe the nuclear blast story :P)
Well, it was quite easy.
I took a picture of my room, with no initial intention of getting to where it got.
Then I saw that the window aperture in the picture was almost of a rectangular shape. I rotated the image to compensate for horizon misalignment, then I removed the portion of the image with the window view. I resized the image to fit the low resolution nuclear blast picture I got from a randm googled site. I inserted it a a bottom layer, blended the 2 in 1 image, applied a noise filter to the whole thing and... that was it. :)
The idea is very good. But I would suggest a bit more work on the part where the nuclear blast photo meets the window edge. It looks a bit like a wallpaper applied in the window frame. Gratz! :)
Well, it is just a layer pasted in. And to make the transition ease out a applied a noise filter.
It could use some blurring along the edges of the 2 photos.
How about now? Applied some blur to it.
Umm, there's a dark line between the outside and the window. Is that due to the size of the original picture?
No. That's actually a part of the original picture. It's the rubber that makes the window sound tight when it's closed. :P
Oh...gratz again then! :)
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