Effect Photo !!INSTALL!!

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Othello Gotcher

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Jan 25, 2024, 4:36:29 AM1/25/24
to lengwillere

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For a presentation I would like to create the effect of torn paper for highlighting a detail of a piece of paper. For example, there is an aricle in a newspaper and I want to place a ripped piece of the newspaper in my presentation with the torn paper effect.

effect photo


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I have a document which I scanned with my flat bed scanner and want to focus my audience to a specific area of the document. So I would like to "rip off" this specific area with an effect looking like the linked picture. Do you know an approach how to produce such an effect?

I've just added a little example Affinity Photo file (Papierabriss.afphoto). Just play with the different layers and you will get the idea. The vector calendar is just the base for the rasterized pixel calendars.

The photo-taking-impairment effect is observed when photographed information is less likely to be remembered than nonphotographed information. Three experiments examined whether this effect persists when multiple photos are taken. Experiment 1 used a within-subjects laboratory-based design in which participants viewed images of paintings and were instructed to photograph them once, five times, or not at all. Participants' memory was measured using a visual detail test, and the photo-taking-impairment effect was observed when participants took multiple photos. Experiment 2 examined the photo-taking-impairment effect using a between-subjects design. Participants either photographed all of the paintings they saw once, five times, or not at all, before being tested on their memory for the paintings. The photo-taking-impairment effect was observed in both photo-taking conditions relative to the no photo baseline. Experiment 3 replicated this pattern of results even when participants who took multiple photos were instructed to take five unique photos. These findings indicate that the photo-taking-impairment effect is robust, occurring even when multiple photos are taken, and after nonselective photo-taking.

BeFunky's Photo Editor was one of the first to offer online photo effects and filters. Starting with our Cartoonizer, we've grown our library of filters extensively, empowering you to achieve your creative vision. We have a wide selection of features that'll take you from photo to art, filters to fit a certain aesthetic, an assortment of A.I. tools for one-click simplicity, and everything in between.

BeFunky gives you more free photo filters and effects than any other online photo editor, with hundreds of options. Our collection of photo effects includes standout photo filters like Winter, Cinematic, Glitch, and Lens Flares that can be customized and applied in just a few clicks. You can stack multiple effects on your image to create a unique, signature look and put our A.I.-powered Background Remover to work to isolate the subject in your photo and selectively apply the photo filter to your image!

S.R.P. and B.S. acknowledge financial support from the Technology Development Program to Solve Climate Changes of the National Research Foundation (NRF) funded by the Ministry of Science, ICT & Future Planning (no. 2016M1A2A2936757), and from the Korea Institute of Energy Technology Evaluation and Planning (KETEP) and the Ministry of Trade, Industry & Energy (MOTIE) of the Republic of Korea (no. 20173010012980). J.H.N. acknowledges financial support from NRF grants funded by the Korea government (MSIP) (2017R1A2B2009676, 2017R1A4A1015022). D.B.M. and O.G. thank the National Science Foundation for support under grant no. DMR-1709294. We thank S. Guha for managing the IBM photovoltaics program; H. Hamann for support; M. Pereira and K. F. Tai for PDL Hall system development; B. Hekmatshoartabari for the silicon sample; and J. Kim for Supplementary Table 4.

O.G. and B.S. conceived the project. O.G. led the project, built the experimental setup, programmed the analysis software, derived equation (1) and other formulas, and performed measurement and analyses. S.R.P. prepared samples, and performed optical and Hall measurements and analysis. O.G., S.R.P., B.S. and D.M.B. developed data analysis, interpretation and participated in manuscript writing. Y.V. helped with the development of the PDL system and derivation of the formulae. Y.S.L. and D.M.B. helped with the optical study. N.J.J. and J.H.N. prepared the perovskite samples and solar cells. D.B.M., T.T. and X.S. developed the champion CZTSSe process. D.B.M. managed the IBM photovoltaics program and participated in manuscript writing.

Circular photo-galvanic effect (CPGE) exists only in gyrotropic crystals1,2. Its transverse component, where the current flows perpendicular to light propagation direction, is by far the most commonly observed. It has been recently measured in transition metal dichalcogenides3, topological insulators4,5,6 and Weyl semimetals7,8,9. In contrast, the longitudinal CPGE, where current flows parallel to light propagation direction, remains more elusive since its discovery in tellurium in 197910.

Several challenges remain to observe the quantized CPGE in chiral semimetals. In this family of materials, the presence of spin-orbit coupling leads to a splitting of the nodes, which can still display quantization but in a reduced frequency range determined by the strength of the spin-orbit coupling, for example as happens in RhSi12,13,14,24,25. Inter-band excitations between the spin-orbit split bands contribute to the non-quantized CPGE, a non-negligible effect in RhSi14. Therefore a small spin-orbit splitting is advantageous to observe the quantized CPGE in multifold materials11,13. In this work, we measure the CPGE in CoSi as its spin-orbit coupling is much smaller than in RhSi12,19.

To calculate the CPGE current, we obtain the density-functional theory (DFT) Bloch wave functions from the Full-Potential Local-Orbital program (FPLO)44 within the generalized gradient approximation (GGA)45. By projecting the Bloch wave functions onto Wannier functions, we obtain a tight-binding Hamiltonian with 104 bands from 3d, 4s, 4p orbitals of Co and 3s, 3p, orbitals of Si, which we use for efficient evaluation of the CPGE photocurrent.

Do you know where I could find a tutorial on how to make a still photo graphic look 3D? There are a load of samples when I search, but no instructions on how to build the effect. I see the 3D effect used a lot in History Channel and PBS programs where the foreground and background look as though they are separate dimensional layers. Would this effect be built in MC using Boris or Photoshop or both?

If you mean, "can I create a 3D faceted look to foreground elements with the standard toolsets?" no you cannot, but you can create a simulation of 3D perspective by isolating the foreground and background elements in photoshop and creating 2 separate comps, one with the background layer as a standard single layer, and another comp with the foreground layer(s) with alpha channels. Import these into Avid (I'll assume you know the necessary import options), position them in the timeline accordingly. Apply a 3D warp effect to the background image, and promote the imported matte key clip to 3D. Now manipulate the perspective controls of each to get the desired motion elements. Typically, the foreground elements will have slightly faster transition rates between motion keyframes than the background layers do, to get a more realistic look.

So you could create something like the effect you see all the time. Is it worth YOUR time to do it that way??? I gues that would depend on whether you own After Effects/PhotoShop and knew how to use them.

You may wish to enhance the photo illustration effect by doing further creative processing to the color image. A great way to add more of an illustration effect is with 3rd party Photoshop filters. Some of the results below may be too stylized for stand-alone photos, but I wanted you to see the originals as well as the effect when combined with the illustration.

Everything I've tried moves the photo around the screen, but doesn't change what part of the screen appears in the photo. I couldn't find instructions for this in the FCP PDF manual. Does anyone know how to do this? Am I supposed to crop the scene first and then apply the effect or something? Thank you.

Thanks Luis and Meg. Meg, if you mean "matte" as in the kind that goes around a picture, yes that's what I'm trying to do. I didn't realize people would be unfamiliar with the Photo Recall effect. For anyone else, the picture frame encloses part of the video clip and displays it in a snapshot effect, but it's taking the image directly from the center of the clip. I'd like the shot to capture someone at the side of the clip instead, but can't figure out how to change the portion of video being captured.

*I had to replace the "Simple Border" filter applied to the "Classic" inset with two Rectangle shapes: one as an outline for the border and one to create a Mask so that the photo could be maneuvered inside the frame. This keeps this variation of the Effect from being exactly the same as the original. If you don't like the "border" width, or you would like to add that as a parameter for the Effect, you can do so in Motion.

By the way, for me the effect doesn't cover quite the whole image. It focuses on the center and some of the periphery, but some of the periphery doesn't get included, so people from the side are walking into the frame. It's actually very cool.

Wow, I didn't expect anyone to go to all that trouble! As I said in the reply to Tom above, I decided to use the effect a different way, so I'm all set for now. Thank you so much for your work, though! Really appreciate it!

A point to note when using this and indeed most of the other in-camera effects available is that the camera will only produce and save a jpeg. Even if the camera is set to shoot RAW and JPG, only a JPG is saved. No RAW file is produced because as you probably are already aware, any in-camera changes to saturation etc. only ever get applied to a JPG file, never to RAW.

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