21

Markku Vitikainen

21

Building: Casino Olympic
City: Vilnius
Country: Lithuania
Date: 31 July, 2007
Time: 21:44 pm
Camera: Canon EOS 5D
Lens: Canon EF28-105mm f/4L IS USM
Focal length: 28mm
Aperture: f/4
Shutter speed: 1/8 sec
ISO: 200
Editing: Photoshop
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21 belongs to the following groups:

Architectural Details, Architectural Photography, Canon DSLR (One Image Per Day & A Canon Camera Must Be In The Description Before It's Accepted), Mood & Ambience - Strictly Photos, PixElations - The Art of Photoshop, Street Photography and Photojournalism and The Fine Art of Photography Available for sale as

Greeting Cards, Matted Prints, Laminated Prints, Mounted Prints, Canvas Prints, Framed Prints and Posters

21 by Markku Vitikainen
21 by Markku Vitikainen
  • Aspire2

    Aspire2

    Great shot Markku.
    Really like it!

  • Markku Vitikainen

    Markku Vitikainen

    Thanks Martin!

  • Paul Vanzella

    Paul Vanzellafounder

    This has ana amzing air brushed feel to it – cool shot!

  • Markku Vitikainen

    Markku Vitikainen

    Thank you! I appreciate your commenting on my work. I spent long hours to create the “right” feel.

  • Antoine Dagobert

    Antoine Dagobert

    great shot well done.

  • Markku Vitikainen

    Markku Vitikainen

    Thank you Antoine.

  • Fergus Randall

    Fergus Randall

    Amazing shot. It reminds me of

  • Fergus Randall

    Fergus Randall

    continued reminds me “of Nighthawks”

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nighthawks

  • Markku Vitikainen

    Markku Vitikainen

    Thank you Fergus. Thank you also for the link to “Nighthawks”. It is a really great painting. Need to look for more of Edward Hopper’s work.

  • Adrian Donoghue

    Adrian Donoghue

    Really like this one Markku.

  • Markku Vitikainen

    Markku Vitikainen

    Thank you Adrian.

  • Trace Lowe

    Trace Lowe

    Perfect!

  • peterhoenderdos

    peterhoenderdos

    Amazing treatment. What did you use for it

  • Markku Vitikainen

    Markku Vitikainen

    Thank you Peter. I adapted a “skin softening” method from Scott Kelby’s book The Photoshop CS2 for Digital Photographers Then used several simple techniques with the little details in the picture. Though I manipulated the picture quite heavily, I still tried to save as much of the original photograph as “possible”.

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