What is Autrey Art?

Random artworks by Lucy Autrey Wilson

Showing posts with label photo composite. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photo composite. Show all posts

Saturday, October 24, 2020

Playing Around With Old Photos, Patterns and Neural Filters in Photoshop on a Gray Day





 Top to Bottom

Photo shot in Seattle, September 2011 with Amber, Cole and Wilson - as shot

Same photo with B&W filter and some Photoshop Beta Neural face smoothing

Same photo with a different Neural filter and a pattern overlay of a repeating self portrait painted by my father, the late, great E.A. Autrey

Same photo toned down a bit by re-layering the original photo over the 3rd photo.

Since I am no longer travelling up to Seattle on a regular basis, this makes up for it a little.

Saturday, December 15, 2018

#15 of 31 Best 2018 Photos

Nearly half way through December and my 31 day wrap up of the best photos I took in 2018.  This is another shot taken in Carmel by the Sea but is a composite of 3 separate photos.

Monday, February 26, 2018

Reflections on my Visit to Seattle

Very cool, modern house in Seattle, reflects the fun had with the Taylor family at Discovery Park, the beach, at home, and on the super, slick slide in the freezing month of February.

Friday, June 16, 2017

Celebrating World Sea Turtle Day






Lucky to have just gone swimming with a sea turtle in the Galapagos this past April on a great tour through Wilderness Travel http://www.wildernesstravel.com/.  Bonus shot (bottom) is a photo composite of two fish I shot underwater, snorkeling off of Santa Fe Island, with a sea turtle I drew in 2011.

Sunday, August 21, 2016

3D Fabric Bird in Photo Composited Bucket

I'm newly enamored with the 3D feature in Photoshop CC.  Hence this 3D bird with cast shadow rendering of a previously created fabric wool punched and embroidered bird, which I then added to a photo of a bucket taken in Mendocino, already combined with another picture of the algae in Abbotts Lagoon.  Digital manipulation provides hours and hours of fun!  Especially since 3D rendering seems to take 1 1/2 hours at minimum.