I should be packing but I decided to waste a little time this morning and play around with an old photo. We don't get to take vacations much anymore so we are left with old memories. One of the greatest places we ever traveled to was southern Spain, way back in 2012.
Now this was before the Americans had moved in and had reclaimed Spain and Portugal, much to the chagrin of the natives. You always had a bunch of drunken Irishmen and the English debauching on the Costa Brava but you just didn't go there. Andalusia was still good, no anti tourist protests or water pistols although we did witness an anti banker communist protest once while in Madrid.
Anyway, as any photographer knows, one of the difficult things to do is to get a picture of any landmark that is not full of those pesky humans, of whatever nationality. Extremely hard to do. They really ruin your shot.
I took this picture in Granada, at the Alhambra. Always loved the architectural form, but all those damn humans!
Well, lightroom has a new tool that does away with all that, removes their presence quicker than you can say Godzilla or Mothra. I started messing with it this morning and came up with this.
I refer you to the Ansel Adams series. Cartier Bresson’s The Decisive Moment, William Eggleston….earth to Robert!❤️😎
ReplyDeleteAs the song goes, "I'll do it my way."
DeleteYes, very useful new feature :-)
ReplyDeleteI was sitting around the table with a couple friends earlier today and the subject of the neutron bomb came up. Kill the people, perserve the buildings. One person spoke up and said, what ever happened to to it. No one could answer, but now I know it morphed into photoshop Ai.
ReplyDeleteThat looks like a useful tool.
ReplyDeleteWow... awesome pictures ! Kenny
ReplyDeleteHaving people in an architectural or landscape photo shows scale.
ReplyDeleteto each his own
ReplyDelete