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Travel snapshots from Toonsarah

Manipulated photo of cornflowers and moon
Gallery: playing around with effects from Enlight

Gallery: playing around with effects from Enlight

November 29, 2020

Unlike any other visual image, a photograph is not a rendering, an imitation or an interpretation of its subject, but actually a trace of it. No painting or drawing, however naturalist, belongs to its subject in the way that a photograph does.

John Berger, Ways of Seeing

When you press the shutter on your camera you capture a fleeting moment; and when you share the photograph with others you share that moment. You can choose to share it just as you saw it, you can tidy it up a bit (straighten a horizon, lighten the image), or you can edit it more extensively. If you play around with a photo enough, it will end up very far from where it started. And yet, that ‘trace’ of the subject that Berger refers to will always be there; a trace of that moment remains.

For this week’s Lens-Artists Challenge, ‘You Pick It!’, I want to share some pictures created using the Enlight Photofox app, which allows blending of multiple images and offers lots of special effects. None of these are true representations of what I saw when I pressed the shutter, of course. But elements of the scene before me at that point can be traced within them. I find them fun to do and interesting to look at, and I would argue that they are at the same time an interpretation of its subject and a trace of it.

I hope you enjoy them too – I’ll be interested in your feedback. Use the comments box below to let me know your favourites. Or feel free to tell me you hate to see photos manipulated in this way!

Click on the images to view as a slideshow

Manipulated photo of street scene

Marrakesh streets

Manipulated photo of girl on phone

In SoHo

Composite photo of Love sculpture and violin

If music be the food of love

Manipulated photo of Chaplin impersonator

Fly away with Chaplin

Manipulated photo of hummingbird

Hummingbird dreams

Manipulated photo of desert sunset

Atacama sunset

Manipulated photo of monkey and Taj Mahal

Langur and Taj composite

Manipulated photo of flower head

Blowin' in the wind

If you’ve enjoyed these you can see more of my manipulated images in my Smoke and mirrors and Black and white or colour? galleries

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28 thoughts on “Gallery: playing around with effects from Enlight”

  1. TheRamblingWombat says:
    December 10, 2020 at 02:51

    Beautiful manipulations.. not sure I can pick a favourite, perhaps ‘In Soho’.

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      December 10, 2020 at 10:16

      Thanks Albert, glad you enjoyed these 🙂

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  2. Pat says:
    December 6, 2020 at 21:18

    I really like these. I think I just may have to try out the app.

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      December 7, 2020 at 08:47

      Thanks Pat. It’s definitely my favourite of the photo editing apps I’ve tried. I miss it now that I have an Android tablet and really wish they’d bring out an Android version. Maybe one day! Do share the results if you have a go, I’m sure you’ll produce some great creations 🙂

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      1. Pat says:
        December 7, 2020 at 14:07

        I looked at the app last night and see that it is for Apple products. Won’t work for me.

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        1. Sarah Wilkie says:
          December 7, 2020 at 14:09

          The closest Android app I’ve found so far is Toolwhiz which can do many of the same things but less intuitively – you might like to take a look at that

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  3. Leya says:
    December 3, 2020 at 21:59

    Ah – just loving these! All of them interesting – but one of them stands out to me especially – the monkey.Taj Mahal in the background? Love the composition, the colours – everything.

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      December 4, 2020 at 08:50

      Thank you Leya 🙂 Yes, that’s the Taj in the background. It’s a composite of two shots – the monkey was taken elsewhere on the same trip, at our hotel in Narlai. Lots of people seem to like that one best. It wasn’t one of my own favourites but I’m seeing it through new eyes after all the positive comments!

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      1. Leya says:
        December 5, 2020 at 21:10

        That’s part of the fun with blogging!

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  4. Forestwood says:
    December 2, 2020 at 06:47

    I like them all. They are artsy and playful. That is why I like edits. Most times we still have the original photo as a historical record, so why not have a play and see what happens. If I have to pick a favourite, I would say the man in the bowler hat – is that a Charlie Chaplin look alike?

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      December 2, 2020 at 10:17

      Thank you Amanda, and you’re right – it’s good to have the original and also have some fun with it 🙂 Yes, the man in the hat is a Chaplin look-alike. He was at a festival in Kempten (Germany) and was happy to pose for a photo, but I doubt he would have expected to end up looking like this!

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      1. Forestwood says:
        December 2, 2020 at 10:27

        What fun! I can tell you have a creative imagination.

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  5. JohnRH says:
    December 2, 2020 at 00:48

    Very unique! Excellent.

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      December 2, 2020 at 10:16

      Thanks John, I’m pleased you liked them 😀

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  6. jazzibee says:
    November 30, 2020 at 21:49

    A great demonstration of what the app can do. My favourites are the top image and the monkey.

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      December 1, 2020 at 08:51

      Thanks James 🙂 It’s interesting that several people picked out the monkey as a favourite, as I nearly left him out – he’s my least favourite! Just shows how subjective these images are, like all photography.

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  7. rosalieann37 says:
    November 30, 2020 at 20:22

    I like the first two (the “second” one is the woman on the right), and the monkey and the flower best. For some reason I don’t mind playing around with flower images. I don’t like images where I don’t know what I’m looking at or where it is too dim and unfocused like the pyramid or mountain. I did not see that it was a hummingbird until I read a comment on it. (I thought It was a dancer)

    Most of the time, I just like to make images “more realistic” and closer to what I experienced at the time. And that isn’t something that usually requires much or at least I don’t have the ability to do much.

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      December 1, 2020 at 08:49

      I’m glad you found some that you liked Rosalie. I agree some are more abstract than others, and perhaps it’s hard for me to see some of them that way as I can also see the original in my mind’s eye. So of course to me that is a mountain and that a hummingbird 😀 By the way, if you hover over images in my galleries you should see a caption, so you shouldn’t have to rely on other people’s comments 🙂

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  8. susurrus says:
    November 29, 2020 at 19:25

    My favourites are the hummingbird and the Soho one. I think it is fine to play about with images, although I don’t do it often. Sometimes the altered version is somehow truer to what we saw when we took the picture.

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      November 29, 2020 at 19:35

      I think that’s right Susan, although maybe not when they’ve been edited quite as much as these. Glad you liked those two – the SoHo one is among my favourites! Thank you for your visit 🙂

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    2. mtncorg says:
      November 30, 2020 at 16:11

      Or truer to what we thought we saw :-\

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  9. margaret21 says:
    November 29, 2020 at 17:14

    Hmm. The jury’s out as far as I’m concerned. I can see that experimenting must be great fun, and I might have a go myself, never having used Enlight. I imagine that as you ‘play’, it provokes all sorts of memories and thoughts that might not have occurred if you hadn’t spent this quality time with your photos. But we, your audience are not privy to them. What we’re exposed to is an interesting image. And that might be just what you want us to see. But perhaps not if the images are part of a travelogue, or historical narrative. I think the market scenes and the monkey are my favourites. Oh dear. I don’t think mine was the right answer!

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      November 29, 2020 at 17:27

      There isn’t a ‘right’ answer Margaret, or a ‘wrong’ one 😀 And you’re right that these wouldn’t work too well as part of a travelogue, or at least, only to supplement the more realistic images perhaps. The point here (if there is one!) is simply to say, here are some images I like, I enjoyed making them and hope that some viewers enjoy seeing them. And maybe to evoke a mood – but that’s subjective and has little to do with the original moment captured – it’s all in the eye of the beholder!

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      1. margaret21 says:
        November 30, 2020 at 08:35

        Maybe a new toy for me to play with next year then, Is this your tool of choice?

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        1. Sarah Wilkie says:
          November 30, 2020 at 08:57

          It was, when I used an iPad. Sadly it’s not available on Android, which I now have. There are some inferior copies but I’m still hoping the developers will produce an Android version. To date it’s been the only photo editing app I’ve thought worth paying for. The closest Android app I’ve found so far is Toolwhiz which can do many of the same things but less intuitively

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          1. margaret21 says:
            November 30, 2020 at 14:15

            Ah! I’m Android. We’ll keep hunting.

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  10. Tina Schell says:
    November 29, 2020 at 17:12

    What a fun approach Sarah – and I really like the quote and your visual interpretations of it. Like all of art I prefer some vs others. My favorites are the monkey, the LOVE, and the Charlie Chaplinish portrait. Terrific response!

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    1. Sarah Wilkie says:
      November 29, 2020 at 17:23

      Thanks so much Tina, I’m glad you enjoyed my approach. Interesting to hear which are your favourites too 🙂 Not necessarily the ones I’d have picked out but then, that’s the fun of this sort of thing!

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Some topics I’ve touched on

africa architecture around_the_world_in_ten_photos art beliefs birds boats buildings bulgaria cffc chile churches cities customs deserts dprk ealing england friendly_friday gambia history india italy japan just_one_person_from_around_the_world landscape laos lens_artists_challenge london monuments museum new_mexico north_korea people photography photo_effects rivers ruins street_art street_photography sunday_stills usa village war wildlife

Some favourite photos

Man in a turban with fishing nets
Fisherman in Fort Kochi, Kerala
Two elephants in long grass
Okavango elephants
Blue glacier edge
Glacier Grey, Torres del Paine, Chile
Elderly woman in black hat and sunglasses
In Santiago, Chile
Very large statues of North Korean Leaders
Statues of the Great Leaders on Mansudae Hill, Pyongyang
Water reflecting the sky with clouds and low sun
Approaching sunset in the Okavango Delta
Feet of huge metal sculpture, with man standing beside
The feet of the Angel
Large moai with row of more behind
The ‘travelling moai’ and Ahu Tongariki
Black and white photo of elderly lady
On the streets of old Hanoi
Mountain reflected in a lake
On the road to Dyrholaey
Squirrel with a conker in his mouth
Silhouette of a man in a gateway
Looking out from Bundi Palace
Wet street and two people with bright pink umbrella
Street in Lucca, rainy day – edited
Blue and pink bird on a dead tree
Lilac-breasted Roller, Chobe NP, Botswana
Man sleeping in a tuk tuk by a carved stone wall
Tuk tuk driver by the Terrace of the Leper King
Close up of flamingo with head tucked under
Flamingo (Jersey Zoo)
Lady with baskets of fruit sitting by a canal
In Hoi An, Vietnam
Buddhist monk in orange robes with mobile phone
Monk at Wat Nong Sikhounmuang, Luang Prabang
Small fishing boat with a man in it, on a large lake
Lake Atitlan
Large tree trunks on a beach and foggy offshore islets
Rialto Beach

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