HOME | DD

Published: 2012-01-14 10:00:39 +0000 UTC; Views: 5782; Favourites: 260; Downloads: 0
Redirect to original
Description
Model: AleksandraStylist: Aleksandra JanduΕa
Makeup: Magdalena Pietrzak
Related content
Comments: 64
duzetdaram In reply to ??? [2014-01-20 09:51:28 +0000 UTC]
Ok. Thank you for your kind answer.Β Hope I did not annoy you with this question.Β Regards.
π: 0 β©: 1
KorindaTaurus [2014-01-19 14:53:30 +0000 UTC]
So stunning. I hate to sound geeky, but this is every Drow Elf fan's fantasy come true!
π: 0 β©: 0
Vyndirya In reply to ??? [2014-01-19 11:38:36 +0000 UTC]
Lovely photo!Β I love how the colour of the lips and the hair match
Congrats on your DD!
π: 0 β©: 0
Lintu47 In reply to ??? [2014-01-19 11:19:25 +0000 UTC]
Congrats on the DD!
Have a nice day!
π: 0 β©: 0
Exillior [2014-01-19 08:41:44 +0000 UTC]
This could have been a stunning photo, but your editing completely ruins it for me. The blurring on her cheeks is obvious. At first glance it looks as if she has stubble on her lip and temples. Really a shame, because with the effect you got from the depth of field, the contrast between the grain of her skin and the softness of the hair that's out of focus would have worked incredibly well. Now it just looks wrong. I'm surprised to see this kind of poor editing, to be honest. I thought the grain/softness contrast was the main reason to use an f/5.6 aperture.
π: 0 β©: 1
Xadrea In reply to Exillior [2014-01-19 23:13:13 +0000 UTC]
I agree with the editing, it's almost as if the detail has been hit with the healing tool too much. I like skin texture, it's a shame it's been softened out!
π: 0 β©: 1
Exillior In reply to Xadrea [2014-01-20 02:05:42 +0000 UTC]
Well, I've not seen the editing process so I'm really just speculating, but from experience this kind of blurring is, sadly... just from blurring. I would guess Gaussian blur by the way this looks. A lot of people used to do that, ten years ago. But frankly, post-processing has moved a long way from this kind of editing now. It pains to see this.
π: 0 β©: 0