Not exact matches
To get this image it took about 500
photos of different poses (some I liked and some I did not), ironing the duvet cover so it was crisp and not too wrinkled, and changing out the pillow covers to that great pop
of blue in the
background.
In these
photos, I also have a few shades
of blue in the
background.
It has a soft
background in hues
of blue and 5 water drop shapes that can be personalized with your
photos.
I don't know why but most
of my outfit
photos are taken with a green or
blue background?
Students can take a
photo of themselves against a green or
blue background (green screen or backing paper) and using the app, add themselves into an image
of a book front cover by combining the two images together in Do Ink.
You get to see those
photos of a laptop and the crystal clear
blue beach
background more often for those seasoned digital nomads
You can't quite make it out in the
photo, but they are decorated with soft
blue flowers on top
of an even softer rose colored
background.
In these particular images, created for Magnum
Photos, the dark
blue skyscrapers from the Elliot Erwitt became the waves in the sea in the Newsha Tavakolian, the
background wall from the Chris - Steele Perkins became the handrail in the Bruce Davidson, and the yellow balloon in the Thomas Dworzak became the blonde hair
of the girl in the Martin Parr.
Now the usual criticisms
of my limited
photo - editing skills have to be taken into account, but you can see how much impact the picture loses by having that strong
blue background, even though it's quite plain in texture.
Other highlights
of the exhibition include her Neverland series from 2002, where she photographed objects, either alone or in groups, on fields
of color; Figure Drawings from 1988 - 2008, featuring an installation
of 40 framed images
of the human figure; Objects
of Desire from 1983 - 1989, where she made collages
of found photographs and rephotographed them against bright
background of red,
blue, green, yellow, and black; Renaissance Paintings from 1991, featuring individual figures and objects from disparate Renaissance paintings isolated and re-photographed against monochrome
backgrounds; Doubleworld from 1995, where the artist transitioned from collaging and re-photographing found images to creating stylized arrangements for the camera; Stills from 1980, where the artist compiled and re-photographed over 70 clippings
of press
photos that capture people falling or jumping off tall buildings; Available Light from 2012, incorporating many
of her techniques utilized over the course
of her career; and Modern History from 1979, in which she has re-photographed the front page
of the newspaper with the text redacted.
These paintings often had
blue backgrounds, which might have been the color
of his studio, where some
of the
photos were taken.
PS: Come back tomorrow for images
of our high gloss
blue butler's pantry that you can glimpse in the
background - I just found the «before»
photos, a testimony to the power
of paint!