16 Aug 2009, 9:44am
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New vintage freebies and more goodies/news!

Yeh, I know, I know, I totally suck at keeping up with this blog and Freebie Fridays. Things get so busy and I just can’t seem to keep up, and for that, I am sorry. I am making it up to you, though, because I have uploaded four fun freebie vintage images for you to download. All are 600 dpi and about 1500 pixels on their longest sides. Here is a preview, just click the image to download the zip file:

click here to download zip file

I have noticed a bunch of new subscribers to the blog–hey you guys, post! I know you’re out there, lurking, because I see you signing up :) Since I’d like to get to know you, I’d love to see you posting. So check in and say howdy!

Anyway, first, let me tell you about the simply GORGEOUS new stuff available at Vintage Art Download, yes, I will say it, call it bragging, but we are far and away the best vintage art download site on the web. Sure I am biased, yeah, I own the place, but man, nobody has our selection, our quality, our customer service, our pricing or our totally singular terms–we don’t ask for any licensing fees and we don’t impose restrictions on use. Nada. Zilch. Nuthin’. Nobody offers 2400 dpi images at 4000-5000 pixels in size, enhanced, retouched, archival quality images.  That’s why printers of posters, fine art/canvas, artists, designers, crafters from all over the world buy from us. They know good stuff when they see it. :)

First, our newest addition is beautiful Victorian Fairies and Nymphs. We only have about twenty images so far, but they are all archival, all 2000-2400 dpi, and all at least 3000 pixels in size…they go up to 4000 pixels. Here are a few of them, aren’t they gawchuss?

fairies at vintage art download

We’ve also added a lot of other new artworks to Vintage Art Download. We added at least one hundred new Vintage Travel Posters that you absolutely must see. From beautiful Italian travel posters to trains and planes and posters from every country from Egypt to India to Japan, they really are gorgeous. To see the newest additions, they are always at the end of the section. Click the image below (three of our new ones) to go to the section:

travel poster downloads at vintage art download

Also, *cough cough*, we’ve added some pretty racy Erotica to the site. We intend to add a lot more, but we’ve got some beautiful art nouveau style erotica as well as Pete Fendi images–Fendi is extremely graphic yet there is a childlike innocence to the images. Click here to see.

We’ve also added a Renoir category, as well as some archival Monets and Klimts. We’re always adding new stuff to the site, so you really need to look at all the sections you’re interested in. Most likely, there will be new stuff. Coming very soon: high resolution, archival quality VAN GOGH.

Love and Kisses to you all, please post to me so I don’t feel like I’m singing in the dark here. ;)

MS

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30 May 2009, 12:26am
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Freebie Friday: Japanese Floral Woodblock art, Petunias

Much more beautiful art to be found on Vintage Art Download, the best high res vintage and fine art download site on the web…nobody else comes close. And there’s no usage restrictions.  From Victoriana to vintage postcards to vintage French posters to Monet, Mucha and Renoir, you will find an explosive high resolution, archival quality collection of printable art unparalleled on the web.

Enjoy…design, create, be inspired and inspire. Download by clicking the thumbnail.

petunia

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24 May 2009, 12:30am
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Freebie Friday-Victoriana, Girl with St. Bernard

Again, sorry I am late. Maybe I should make it “Freebie Saturday” or “Freebie Whenever I Can Get To It.” ;) Hope you can forgive me. This beauty is a piece of classic Victoriana…a beautiful young girl and her dog. Use it freely and don’t worry about restrictions. Do what you want with it–hopefully, it will spur your imagination and you’ll use it for new, derivative works. I’d love to see what you’ve done, so if you post the result, you’ll make me happy! Click the image to download the full size. It’s nice and big, 300 dpi, and retouched…as is all our downloads. Don’t forget to visit www.vintageartdownload for the really good stuff, with no restrictions.

dog

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17 May 2009, 9:59am
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Freebie Friday-Art Nouveau Decoratif

Sorry folks; late again with my Friday Freebie, but this one will make it up to you. I don’t know about you, but I adore Art Nouveau. Give me those luscious, ornate swirls, parabolas, flourishes and I am one happy girl. One of my favorite artists, Alphonse Mucha, is the definitive Art Nouveau master. If you want Mucha in high res download format, without any usage restrictions, click here.

This one is a beauty; you can make it seamless for backgrounds or use it as is for logo and web design or as part of an original art piece. Click the image to download the high resolution version.

And hey, if you like our freebies, tell me! Post to me here and tell me how you used it, or even better, show me what you’ve done with it. I’d love to see :) If there is something you’d like to see here, also, let me know—I can’t read your mind ;)

Remember, for the best vintage and fine art in high resolution, downloadable digital format, there’s only one site: Vintage Art Download.

art_nouveau_decoratif

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10 May 2009, 11:20am
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Post processing your fractals-exploring new ways to create fractal art.

For those of you fractal artists who believe that fractals should remain “pure” and “untouched” right out of the fractal generator, cover your eyes. In fact, close this page on your browser, because this article is about taking the beauty of fractals and changing them, molding them like clay, adapting them in accord with your own personal artistic eye. I don’t believe in the “purist” viewpoint–in fact, I think it’s rather silly. Fractals are art, and as such, are means to an end, and the end is the artist’s vision. Just as no two completed fractals are just alike, neither are fractal artists, their vision or their tools.

(Note: I exclusively use Tierazon and Vchira for my fractal art. However, they are no longer available for download. They used to be available for purchase, but I can’t seem to find them anywhere. They are very small programs and need no install, so if you’d like these programs, post to me here.)

beforeandafter

I wrote this “post-processing” (in other words, changing, tweaking, revising, adapting) tutorial for fractals in 2003, but I think it’s still relevant today and can offer any fractal artist who wishes to experiment some new ideas and ways of looking at their fractal art. At the very least, I hope it sparks your imagination and allows you to take risks and try things you’ve never tried before.

(I am an exclusive Photoshop user, and though I am fairly certain that programs like Paintshop Pro have similar features, I do not know their names so all my references will be from Photoshop.)

Of course, it goes without saying that some fractals are so perfect, so blissfully perfect, that to touch them would be blasphemous. I don’t see a whole lot of those, and this article is for the majority others which may have not been as similarly blessed. :)

Everything starts with the raw fractal. I believe you can train your eye to “see” beauty and possibilities in the most mundane of images. After awhile, once you become really comfortable with your generator of choice, you’ll know the kinds of lines and shapes that work the best and just need your special touch to bring them out.

Don’t be so quick to trash a fractal that doesn’t sing to you. If it made you stop and look, there may be something there. Keep the parameter for another day. You might be surprised at what you’ll find. Many of my own favorites were literally pulled out of the recyle bin. Conversely, I freely admit to working for hours and hours on an image only to be dreadfully disappointed with it, and it never sees the light of day.

Composition
Never rush your cropping and composition–both in your fractal generator and in your art program. It’s just as important as anything else you will do to it, and is often the difference between an average image and a great one. I compose and crop more than once, I may even do it multiple times. It is not unusual for me to spend a half hour, an hour or even more, composing and cropping.

Everything needn’t always be centered. Make it interesting! Try it as an off-center image. Or rotate the fractal round and round (either in your generator, if you can, or your art program) and see which way it looks the best. Make sure there is no boring, wasted, hanging space that does nothing but pull the eyes away from what you want the viewer to notice, what you want to emphasize.

Is there too much stuff going on in the image, so much so that the eye won’t know what to look at first? Is it beautiful but not flowing together smoothly, does it look somewhat awkward? You can often fix these problems with cropping. Do not be afraid to crop, and crop dramatically. In fact, don’t be afraid to crop so dramatically that you’ve totally changed your image, and need to render it again in a larger size because you’ve cropped so much off! Like a good writer, a capable artist will sacrifice a beautiful piece of his or her image if it detracts from the whole. Cropping is a crucial part of the process, and should not be rushed or underestimated.

before_after_one

Your Raw Image
I ask myself what the fractal is “about” after I’ve generated and composed it to my satisfaction. Does it have really interesting, well-defined shapes but is lacking in good color? Or, is it all about color while being rather amorphous? What stands out most about the fractal? What am I going to emphasize? Is it that wild shape in the corner that attracted me, a striking form surrounded by quieter, more serene shapes? Is it a happy image or a moody one? Is it a dreamlike image*, or more of a still life, or is it an abstract? Once you have a feel for the “mood” your image is going to exude, then you will have a better idea of the direction you will ultimately go with it. Don’t “fight” the image. In this I mean that if it has more shape and shadow going for it than color, then emphasize the shapes and let the color take second billing. If the image is all about color, then play that up with strong contrasts and glow and don’t worry about emphasizing the shapes. Go with the flow of the image you’ve made in your generator. Follow its lead.

*(For example: a dreamlike image might use a lot of different blurring effects, both with blurring filters and your hand blurring tool. Dreamlike images also work very well with some of the Flaming Pear filters like “Glare” and “Aetherize.” KPT 6′s “Equalizer” filter is one I couldn’t live without. I use it for everything. This filter gives you endless possibilities in blurring and sharpening, like having the millions of little quarter-notes between the half-notes.)

Color
The first thing I usually look at after the cropping is color. Am I happy with the colors? Usually I’m not, so I start changing them.

A side note about Ultra Fractal, inarguably the most popular and sophisticated fractal software. The artistic control you have with color (as well as other things like layers) in UF is legendary. However, you do not have even one-quarter the amount of comprehensive, artistic control of your image in any fractal generator, including UF, as you do in Photoshop or in an art program.

There are many ways to change your color. So many, in fact, that only a few will be mentioned here. First, I decide if I like the level of saturation. Often, I might start the recoloring process by desaturating a touch just to soften it. Then I might do a “test color run” by opening the Hue menu and sliding the hue bar back and forth to see the possibilities. Sometimes a slight hue adjustment is enough, although most times it isn’t.

Next, I’ll open the Color Balance menu. Giving you much more control than the Hue sliding bar, Color Balance allows you to add different shadows, tones and highlights to your *whole* image by sliding the bars back and forth. Is it a sea scene? Slide the bar toward green or cyan. An autumn scene? Go more yellow and red.

After that, if I want to play some more, I’ll go to the “Grandaddies Of Color Control options”: Selective Color and Replace Color. These are my favorites. With Selective Color, let’s say you have a yukky red shade you want to get rid of, but you want to keep everything else. You pull the drop-down menu to adjust only the Reds, and start sliding the color bars back and forth until the reds change into other colors and hues you’re happier with. With Replace Color, you can exercise even more control: using your eyedropper to select the color you want to change, as well as the amount of Tolerance (ie, how much of the color you want to select, you can only select part of it and not all of it) and change only that particular color. There are literally thousands of hues and shades and colors, and changing the Tolerance level of your selection can literally be infinite when it comes to the end color result.

Another way to change your colors is by using the regular Select menu, by dropping down and clicking on Color. With this option, you select your color with your Magic Wand, highlight it and change it to something more appealing. “Save selection” is an important part of this option because it allows you to go back later and load this same color selection again, even though later on the image may have changed dramatically. By saving your selection and then later clicking Load Selection, you can easily re-select the part of the image you originally chose, colorwise. You can do this even if you can no longer make your original color selection with your Magic Wand; having been prevented from doing so because the colors and shadows have now changed. (Because Magic Wand only picks up smooth blankets of same-color areas, after you’ve changed their color it is sometimes impossible to go back and re-select them without saving the selection.)

After you’ve changed your colors and you are content with the changes, then you can play and see what various filters will do to your image. I typically run my image through Flaming Pear’s Aetherize or Mr. Contrast or KPT’s Channel Surfing (From KPT Effects) to see what kind of effects I’ll get. I may not use them at all, or maybe I’ll use them just a little by clicking on the filter and then clicking on “fade” which will lessen the effects of whatever last filter, or action, I applied. The “fade” button is absolutely essential. I play with it right after every single effect I apply, to see how to best maximize that particular effect. Sometimes applying an effect at merely three percent strength is enough, and anything more than that is way too much.

The Curves filter in Photoshop is another wonderful way to get interesting color and light effects. You can enhance each channel, or find the dark and light colors and enhance the difference, or enhance the monochrome values of the image. Do not be afraid! Keep experimenting with your image. You don’t have to save the effects you don’t like.

Then, of course, there is always the hand-coloring option with your paintbrush.

Think I’m done yet with color? Nope. Because when I am not satisfied one hundred percent with my color, or still feel more can be done, I may go back to the same filters a second, third and fourth time to see the different effects I can get by reapplying filters over and over again, in varying amounts and ways. I might layer two or more different versions together, changing opacities and values, to see which version I like the best.

Cloning, Shadows and Light
You may find you have an image with an empty, boring area that just lays there like an eyesore, adding nothing to your image, and you’ve already cropped as much as you can. In many cases, you can use the cloning tool. “Cloning” simply means copying a part of your image and reproducing it elsewhere in the image. With the Cloning Tool, you can take a little part of your image and clone it into the empty space, blending it in. You can even clone at diminished opacity, to make it look faded or far away–a subtle afterthought that can add so much depth to your image.

To add shadows and highlights, you can use your Dodge and Burn tools to emphasize what is already there– all you need to do is to follow the natural structure of the image. Example: do you see highlights, lighter parts of the image that are seemingly facing the light? Use your dodge tool to brush over these areas to emphasize them. Conversely, use your burn tool to deepen your shadows and make them even more shadowy and contrasty. Another way to de-emphasize and emphasize parts of your image is to blur them; the sharpened part of the image will then pop out even more and grab attention when you blur what’s around it. The same effect can be used with the sponge tool, which can both desaturate or saturate color. This tool is wonderful when you want to either add or remove emphasis from a part of the image.

Another handy filter with which to add light is Flaming Pear’s Glare filter. Certain blurring and sharpening filters, like KPT’s Equalizer, also add a certain amount of light to the image. Keep experimenting; you can always hit “undo”.

You can also get wonderful lighting effects with KPT’s Effects filters, in the Channel Surfing filter. There is a preset which is luminescent, and effectively yet subtly lightens the image in such a way that it looks like ambient light.

“Everything was a blur……”
One of the most effective ways to bring attention to certain parts of your image is to blur others. Usually (not always) the part you want to blur is the background. To blur your background in Photoshop, while maintaining the most amount of control as you do so, is easy. First, you want to duplicate your layer. Then, go to filter, then blur, then Gaussian blur, and blur the bottom of the two layers…..blur as much or as little as you like. Working with the toppermost layer, you will use your brush, in the CLEAR mode, to erase the top layer so it will reveal the blurred image below. I sometimes go to my layer menu and adjust the opacities of the upper layer as I do this, so I can better see what I am blurring below. Remember, in clear mode, you can adjust the opacity of your brush as you are erasing. This allows for endless myriad effects in your image.

Arbitrary Filters aka “I Go Crazy”
Just a little note here about popular filters like Flaming Pear’s Flood filter, the filter that creates beautiful water effects, complete with reflections. Like many artists, I, too, love that filter, but I am aware of the danger of overuse and try to use it sparingly and only when I feel the image would be enhanced by it. A Mandelbrot or Julia rising out of the misty depths of the sea can be interesting, but it can also be a cliche if not handled properly. If the image can stand on its own, by all means, let it. It won’t need the odd and overdone juxtaposition of water and fractal. It makes no difference as to whether you create your “water” in your fractal generator with a formula or in an art program with a filter; the end result is usually the same: uninspired generica. Another example of this is the sparkly brush filter that makes shiny parts of an image seem to sparkle and glitter. In small doses, this is a very effective tool. When you see flat, non-shiny surfaces with a little sparkle, you’re looking at what I call The Flood Effect, or overkill.

The End Game
To me, framing your image or “preparing it for the gallery walls” as my friend would say, can make the difference between a typical presentation and a compelling one. Beautiful, ornate digital frames can be quite breathtaking, but only if they don’t overpower your image. You don’t want people gaping at your frame and ignoring your image. The frame should be considered part of the image and not a separate entity; they should flow together seamlessly. You might want to consider something other than a traditional beveled frame, and make the fractal itself the frame. There are many ways of doing this; here are just a few: by duplicating the image colors in a drop shadow; by bringing the image itself into the frame; by applying an array of effects to the borders/edges of your image to create your frame. Is your image about duality? Slice it in two and frame the two pieces next to one another. Is one part of your image busy and the other part serene? Frame the busy part more ornately than the quiet part to artfully drive this home. If you imagine your image is leading you, almost like a dance partner, creating different ways to frame your image will come to you more readily.

Thinking out of the Mandelbox
Why eat one piece of chocolate when you can have three? You can take elements of other fractals to incorporate into your image, whether it’s a shape or even a hue. You may generate a fractal that’s interesting, but prefer to make it part of another image instead of the whole reason for being, because it isn’t powerful enough to stand on its own. You may decide to make the image a metamorphasis of sorts by actually showing the development of the image–the changes and additions–by displaying them all. For example, you might want to juxtapose your original fractal next to the finished version, but make it part of the same image and frame them together. There are no rules, nor should there be. What personally rocks my world is exaggeration: whether it’s exaggerated color, exaggerated monochrome, exaggerated light effects or shapes, exaggerated flatness or shadow. What rocks your world? Do it, then!

There are truly no limits when you decide to push your creativity as far as it can go by really diving into your image and making it your own. Be daring and unafraid. If you’ve never seen it done before, it’s most probably a winner.

(New to fractals? Check out Ultra Fractal, Fractal Explorer, Chaos Pro, Apophysis. Or you can Google “Fractal Generator” and see the many free generators available for download.)

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9 May 2009, 4:04am
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Antique Styled Tumbled Stone Porcelain Clock

Based on a turn-of-the-century French clock face, Color Bakery’s new antique style stone clock is made from tumbled porcelain stone imported from Italy. At 12″ square, this heirloom quality piece of stone *is* real stone from the earth, and as such, boasts delicate, naturally present jagged edges, lines and crevices that add to the antique look and vintage charm. The complementary clock hands are black metal in a lovely, antique scroll design. We will custom produce any image on the Color Bakery OR Vintage Mural site for your custom clock.

Click image to see full size. Click HERE to purchase.

antique_porcelain_stone_clockbrown

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9 May 2009, 3:56am
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Freebie Friday-Two vintage digital downloads today

My apologies for being late for Freebie Friday….so I am making it up to you with two high resolution vintage images instead of one. One is a beautiful turn of the century floral, and the other is a vintage advertisement. To download, click on the image. Enjoy, and tell your friends about Vintage Art Download, the ONLY website on the ‘net with a huge, unprecedented selection of high resolution vintage and fine art downloads WITHOUT user restrictions.

vintageroses

manola

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2 May 2009, 9:36am
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New Victorian/Vintage French Style Romantic Glass Clock

Priscilla, Color Bakery’s newest Limited Edition 12″ glass clock features antique, vintage styling–a distressed floral background acting as a “canvas” for the vintage beauty carrying a basket of flowers. (The distressing surface is the artwork, the glass itself is not distressed). The clock numerals are from an authentic 18th century French clock. As with all our products and art, the Priscilla Clock is exclusive to Color Bakery. Perfect gift for Mother’s Day! Can be displayed on wall (ready to hang) or using clock stand.

We do not have a product photo yet, but this is the artwork from which it will be reproduced. We will get a photo of the product online as soon as possible, but this is a very accurate representation.

Beautifully reconstituted, (earth-friendly) smooth glass, delicate pale gold hands and incandescent color make this wall clock a stunning way to tell time. The stand-alone clock (no border or frame) enhances its beautiful design, compelling in elegant simplicity. Mounting hardware on back; takes one AA battery (not included).

Click image to see full size, and/or to purchase.

priscilla_clock_nostalgica

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2 May 2009, 9:27am
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Freebie Friday: Compagnie, Les Maitres de L’affiche (Masters of the Poster)

Sorry I am a day late with this Freebie Friday vintage poster art. 300 dpi, 3000 pixels at its longest side, this French Chocolate Poster (Compagnie Francaise des Chocolats) is one of my favorite art posters from that glorious era of poster art. Click the image to download the full size. Please don’t forget to visit Vintage Art Download for much more vintage goodness at high resolution and no user restrictions.

compagnie

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26 Apr 2009, 6:10am
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Country French Vintage Grapes Clock

Beautiful 12″ glass wall or desk clock, Country French distressed antique styling. Click here to purchase/learn more.

vintage_grapes_clock_brown

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