iPhone photography tutorial – { mrs whistler foggy edit }
Creating a foggy atmosphere from a single ordinary street scene iPhone photograph including some complex masking using a combination of masking tools.
Detailed iPhone photography tutorials showing the iphone app used at each stage of the editing process and the resulting image. Provides full detail of how the initial capture progresses through the editing process to arrive at the finished work. All iPhoneography is 100pct captured on iPhone and edited on a combination of iPhone and iPad.
Creating a foggy atmosphere from a single ordinary street scene iPhone photograph including some complex masking using a combination of masking tools.
Candid street iPhone photography showing the process behind the creation of a manipulated foggy atmosphere in a vintage coloured style.
Tutorial looking at the shift aspect of tilt-shift iPhone photography together with a style of photography dubbed ministract (part minimal and part abstract).
iPhone photography full length portrait tutorial showing reflection, texture, layers, masking, blending and framing processes. Also includes a bonus edit and small collection with the official Polaroid app.
FLTR the iPhone photography magazine and making money through two iPhone stock photography organisations Stockimo (by Alamy) and RooM linked to Getty.
Making the most of your Olloclip for Macro iPhone photography – it’s not just the lens. I’ve played These are my initial impressions and learning points.
Most of the time the joy of iPhone photography is the result. The destination. It’s not about how I got there or how many apps I used (I’m still trying keep the number of apps I use in each iPhoneography work to a minimum). This is an example.
This iPhoneography workflow focuses on black and white photography. It touches on a combination of manual processes and quick automated processes via some powerful apps.
Following my recent foggy iPhone photography manipulations I have received a few requests for a little more detail especially around the process in Superimpose. I therefore decided to create a video.
Fog is my favourite weather for creating atmospheric mobile photography. Mother nature does all the work for me. All I need to do is find an interesting composition and frame it. When she doesn’t produce fog, I try to mimic her work.
My go to iPhoneography apps. I tend to share my more complex iPhone photography. Perhaps the iPhone apps that I use day to day get ignored. Here they are.
Floral still life iPhone Photography work in a textured painterly style. Very often I build a grungy texture in to my iPhoneography but with this one I decided to take a slightly different route and create something with a more minimalist clean feel.
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