Tricks and treachery are the practice of fools, that don’t have brains enough to be honest
Benjamin Franklin
If tricks are the practice of fools, where does that leave trick photography? The genre is nearly as old as photography itself. Early photographers developed the techniques to create double exposures, to mimic the appearance of ghosts in their shots or to use distorting mirrors. Their critics claimed that ‘truth’ was one of the prime qualities of photography (‘the camera never lies’) and decried such tricks. But were those early experimenters really so foolish or so treacherous? Or did they pave the way for today’s explosion of in-camera and post-editing trickery?
I do very little of the former, preferring to capture scenes as they are, especially for my travel photography. However I do enjoy some fun post-editing, often using some of the more creative apps that are available these days. I shared some of my surreal creations last summer, for a previous Lens Artists challenge (Creating the surreal in post-production). And I created some spooky edits for Terri’s Sunday Stills challenge for Halloween in 2021, Creating an eerie unreality. Not to mention some much earlier posts on a similar topic!
For this week’s challenge set by Donna, It’s tricky, I decided to create some brand new ‘trick’ images as well as pull a few more out of my archives. I hope you enjoy the results.
Technical note
Some of these shots were created a while ago using an app called Enlight by Photofox. It was a real favourite of mine but unfortunately wasn’t available for Android, so since I switched from iPad to Samsung I turned to alternatives. All of them are fine but none of them combines all the tricks I learned with Enlight. Since then Photofox has been taken over by Lightricks, and their apps, while now available across all platforms, don’t quite match up to the old Enlight. If anyone has recommendations for great Android apps for trick editing, other than those I mention below, please leave me a comment and I’ll try them out too!
With Enlight I created this image in which trees in a Kerala tea plantation appear to be bursting out of my phone!
Enlight also enabled me to create a scene in a cinema with birds flying out of the screen. The source image, on screen, is also from our Kerala trip.
Another Enlight edit, of a edit of girl from a carnival in Cape Verde with the universe in her hair!
My final Enlight example from my archives is of a road in the Torres del Paine with chocolate apparently being poured over it from a spoon!
Here’s one of the images I created especially for this challenge. It’s a double exposure of a road in Colombia and African elephants in Botswana, created with the Lumii app.
Another Lumii creation, a double exposure of the Empty Quarter in Oman and Shiva statue near Pokhara. I also added a touch of the aurora, one of the app’s backgrounds.
This double exposure was created with another app, Toolwiz. I blended a man on a Colombian beach with a pool of hippos in Botswana!
I used Lumii to add a dramatic moon rise to this shot of the Eiffel Tower from the Montparnasse Tower in Paris. The colour was added later in Photoshop.
This is a straightforward shot of a butterfly on bougainvillea in Colombia, but thanks to Toolwiz it appears to be a piece of street art!
I didn’t take my lens ball to the Taj Mahal but using the Mirror Lab app I can trick you into thinking that I did! I added the blur later using a vignette filter in Color Efex Pro.
And now for something a little different. I created this little video using an app called Motionleap by Lightricks. It enables you to turn still images into videos, another cool trick! It works particularly well with water. You can also add skies with moving clouds, and additional elements like the birds in this one, based on a still taken in Halong Bay.
44 Comments
SoyBend
The second image is absolutely magical, Sarah. I also really liked the one of the Eiffel Tower.
Sarah Wilkie
Thanks so much Siobhan 😊
Suzanne
Sarah, I’m another fan of your creative work. Fun to try something new and creating more brain connections. I don’t think I would be driving far if the road was made of chocolate 🙂
Sarah Wilkie
Haha no, nor would I 🤣 Glad you enjoyed seeing these Suzanne.
wetanddustyroads
How much fun it must have been to put these photos together! All are beautiful “tricky” photos, but I especially enjoyed the Torres del Paine photo (could it be because there is chocolate in it, I wonder now 😉). And the one with the Eiffel Tower is just wow. Great post Sarah!
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you 😊 Can you imagine driving down a road full of chocolate?! Or maybe boating, as the chocolate is molten and more like a river 😆
JohnRH
WOW. Great great GREAT modifications. Fantastic. Motorcycle and elephants is one of my most faves. All are excellent.
Sarah Wilkie
Thanks so much John 😀 I had fun with that one, creating something a bit more interesting out of a fairly dull road photo!
pattimoed
Fantastic post, Sarah. You know so many tools and have given me some great apps to explore. Fabulous! Thanks so much for sharing.
Sarah Wilkie
Thanks so much Patti 😊 I’m always on the lookout for interesting editing apps and I’ve tried a few over the years but these ones are among the better / more fun ones. For serious editing I prefer the laptop.
Leela Gopinath
Wonderful…
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Leela 😊
norasphotos4u
Amazing work!!
Sarah Wilkie
Thanks so much Nora 😊
Rose
A very creative gallery of ‘trick’ photography, Sarah. My favorites are the girl with the universe in her hair and the moon rise shot of the Eiffel Tower in Paris.
Sarah Wilkie
Thanks so much Rose – that girl in particular seems to be a general favourite 😀
Sue
Great post…th first and las Enlight images are fab!
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Sue 😊 As I mentioned to Jude below, Enlight had great tutorials and fun weekly challenges, which I used in creating those images.
Sue
Shame that nifty little app has gone
Sarah Wilkie
It’s been broken down into several more specific apps, none of which are as good!
Sue
And they call it progress!
Aletta - nowathome
Amazing images!
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Aletta 🙂
Heyjude
How delightful. I really like the girl with the universe in her hair and that chocolate road. Great surreal images Sarah, I admire your skills.
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Jude, that girl seems to be a general favourite. I learned a lot when I had the Enlight app, as they had lots of good tutorials and set weekly challenges. Both the ones you like were among my responses to those as well as the one with the cinema.
Wind Kisses
This entire gallery was stunning, impressive and once again true to your workmanship and creativity, Sarah. I am not sure where to start. The video was interesting. I am sure others will take your lead and go with it. I loved the way you introduced your topic, and asked if it was “foolish or treacherous, or if it was to pave the way”. In the old days probably both. Loved all your trick images, especially the elephants and the motorcycle. It looks so natural. Well done. The one of the hair was fun and it is ironic you made it. In a recent search, I found an artist who creates large mural-sized faces on walls. The trick comes with the trees and shrubs planted behind the wall making it look like hair. Thought of you, with your recent photos of street art. And I do love your street art today from Columbia. You have an amazing gift. Thank you for sharing it with all of us this week.
Sarah Wilkie
Oh wow, thank you for such enthusiastic feedback and for the compliments Donna 😊 It was such fun putting this post together, hunting out my old examples and creating some new images too. I’d forgotten how much I enjoy messing around like this, so expect more some time in the future!
Wind Kisses
I am glad. It was fun for me too. I am camping on the beach for a week, beginning next week. It might be fun to experiment there.
Sarah Wilkie
Sounds a great idea! Enjoy your week on the beach 🙂
Mike and Kellye Hefner
Though you used technology to create these images, I admire your ability to turn photos into creative works of art. I especially like the elephants and the motorcycle. The video also turned out very cool.
Sarah Wilkie
Thanks so much Kellye, I’m glad you liked these 😀
Susanne Swanson
Amazing, Sarah! I’ve not tried anything like this before! I especially love the elephants looming over the highway, and the gorgeous photo of Paris.
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Susanne 🙂 I’d not done any for a while but this challenge got me experimenting again. It’s a bit addictive once you start!
grandmisadventures
Tricky indeed- by my goodness you created some really beautiful and interesting pictures with the tricks! 🙂
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you so much, I’m really glad you liked them!
philosophy through photographyPhilo
Fantastic!
Love the desert, Lord Shiva and the beautiful sky.
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Philo 🙂
Anne Sandler
Wow Sarah, you certainly had fun with these. Were they all done on a cell phone or some on a computer? My favorite is the girl with the hair.
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Anne. They were all done initially on a tablet (I find a phone too small to work on for anything other than the most basic edits), using apps. Some were tweaked further on the computer using Photoshop and/or Color Efex – mainly adjusting brightness, but I did add the vignette to the lens ball effect as the app version was too sharp.
Tina Schell
Wow Sarah, you truly went above and beyond on this one! I loved all of your tricky images and am impressed by the number of tools you used! The photo that looks like wall art was my very favorite!
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Tina – that wall art one is actually the easiest to achieve, with a simple texture filter 🙂
thehungrytravellers.blog
Being a technophobe I’m not sure I’m comfortable with any of this…maybe I was born in the wrong era! As evidenced by the fact that my immediate thought on the “girl with the hair” photo was of a line in Jeepster by T Rex….. you know the one…
Sarah Wilkie
I know these tricks aren’t for everyone but I enjoy the creative process of fiddling around to get an effect that I think works. But I’m pretty sure we were born in the same era so I don’t think that’s a factor. Yes, I absolutely see what you mean about Jeepster and I wish I’d thought of that for the title: You’ve got the universe reclining in your hair 😀 I’m more of a Ride a White Swan fan myself, and Debora
thehungrytravellers.blog
Ha well I’m much more music than technology, Sarah…. I haven’t exactly grasped the modern world. Ah well, we can’t be good at everything 😂😂