Flowers

Flowers

A large part of the last two weeks has been spent on filing. Oh so FUN! Actually, I don’t mind and I think I’m finally getting the machine embroidery files organized. Although I keep finding unzipped files and duplicate–lately in folders I thought I’d completed. Being a free design junkie and having gone crazy when I first got my embroidery machine, I have way more designs than I’ll ever get to. It’s taking forever and while I don’t mind, it does get tedious.

Tuesday night I was looking at some Magic Eye pictures and found some Magic Eye wallpaper for my desktop. As I searched for them, I read a little about how they were created. When I got up on Wednesday, I was tired of filing. I wanted to try and see if I could create my own Magic Eye style image. (No, but almost.)

As soon as I opened GIMP, it told me an update was available. I got it but couldn’t get my G’MIC to work, so I had to reinstall the older GIMP. While looking for a G’MIC update I discovered another free, open source art program (Krita). I’m excited to play with/learn more about it, but it was time for my appointment.

After dinner I was going to put some photos into it to see what it does, but somehow I ended up in GIMP. Initially it was just to isolate the flowers from the background, but, as usual, I got involved and ended up playing in GIMP/G’MIC the whole night.

Bouquet

Each flower is from my garden. One rose, one hydrangea cluster and one spirea cluster, each triplicated (9 layers). The background is a photo of sunset across the street. I removed the house and everything else non-sky, triplicated it to fill the image, and blended the layers to make it one. Each layer was run through G’MIC’s “Brushify” filter. Then I simply arranged them in a way I liked (breaking a couple of the spirea into two layers each) over the sunset sky. Each flower layer got a legacy drop shadow. The mat is a G’MIC regular frame, and the frame is a painting frame. I deleted the shadow in the painting frame because I don’t like how it does corners (and I keep forgetting to see if I can change it) and I added a double legacy drop shadow, one turned 180ยบ.

Bouquet 2

This is the same image with the bouquet turned and the relief light filter. The relief light make the flowers look somewhat porcelain. Doing it the way I did messes up the light direction, which was already skewed because the flowers were photographed from different angles, and then turned in the arrangement.

I prefer the first image better.

2 thoughts on “Flowers

    1. Thank you! Since sitting nearly motionless for ten hours straight seems to be my best skill, I seem to do better at things that use that. Oh well, better than being addicted to soaps.

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