Taking a good photo is not that easy. And taking a breathing taking picture is even harder. And taking an impossible photo is of course impossible. But if you know how to use a photograph everything is possible, proves photographer Peter Stewart.
Peter Stewart has used various sky adjustments performed in Photoshop. Nik Color Efex Pro used for post-production colour enhancements. (Photo: peterstewartphotography.com)
Perspective re-correction and power line removal in photoshop. Colour enhancements using color Efex Pro. (Photo: peterstewartphotography.com)
Peter Stewart using colour temperature adjustment using adobe cameraraw in this picture. (Photo: peterstewartphotography.com)
\"As such, I have deliberately provided the most dramatic examples,†says Stewart. (Photo: peterstewartphotography.com)
“These before and after samples are simply meant to highlight what can be done with the power of Photoshop,' says Stewart. (Photo: peterstewartphotography.com)
The technique allows Peter Stewart to retain highlight details from different photographs before stacking them together into one picture. (Photo: peterstewartphotography.com)
Peter Stewart uses a technique called bracketed multiple exposure. (Photo: peterstewartphotography.com)
“I like to approach my digital photography with a certain sense of the fantastical and the surreal,†Stewart told PetaPixel. (Photo: peterstewartphotography.com)
Peter Stewart's photos reveal before and after pictures just what sort of difference some clever editing can make. (Photo: peterstewartphotography.com)
And you can see that from Peter Stewart's photo. (Photo: peterstewartphotography.com)
Peter Stewart's is just a pro when it comes to using Photoshop. (Photo: peterstewartphotography.com)
Peter Stewart is an internationally published photographer with thousands of followers and millions of views. (Photo: peterstewartphotography.com)
Taking a good photo is not that easy. And taking a breathing taking picture is even harder. And taking an impossible photo is of course impossible. But if you know how to use a photograph everything is possible, proves photographer Peter Stewart.