It was how frail I looked.
I took the phone down to Sue to show her what I was seeing. Did my beloved reassure me that such was not the case? Did she tell me that I looked robust? No, she didn't! She just agreed that I look frail and said that I was almost 80. I was shattered, I tell you.
And then, when I met with the boys and showed the photo and told them what Sue had said, Bob said the words. "You are frail." So, there we are, and here I am.
Now I have an ex-friend and a wife who is on shaky ground. ;)
But then I got this question on my previous post: "Has anyone told you are just too darn cute?" Well no, not until now or at least not for a very long time. This makes me feel better, and could I please have your phone number? lol
There's nothing more to say about that, so onward to some talk about photo editing.
I wanted to either crop the photo ↑ to eliminate the vacuum hose or just edit it away. Then I thought to see what photoshop could do if I asked for a "cream colored wall background" The result ↓ Unfortunately, it added some floor which I didn't notice at the time or I would have tried again.
I got more ambitious and wondered if it could take Sue out of this ↓ photo and put me in it.
While I have very mixed feelings about AI creations, I think it is fair enough to use it for editing tasks that I would have liked to have done without it but couldn’t quite summon either the time or skill or both. So, I do find it acceptable to allow AI to do some of the heavy lifting for me. AI does it easier, quicker and usually better.
Here's another result from the tee shirt shoot in which I replaced the background differently and then merged two photos into one composite. I think I should have been bigger in the goose shirt, but that is my fault; Photoshop AI just handled the actual blending (ie lighting) of the two images.
I have some fun experimenting with the new editing tools that make it easier to reach my vision although that seems to be too strong of a word for the basic work that I do.




I like the term "my vision." If you look frail, it's just because you're trim, I'm thinking. And you have an arm raised in the last shot, without the telltale hanging flap of skin which my upper arm has had for at least 10 years...aka in my 70s. I call those my wings...and I'm still not looking frail, since I'm pretty well fed...my definition of frail at least.
ReplyDeleteYou are slim. The test is can you do Activities of Daily Living or IADLs?
ReplyDeleteI tell my kids, the two I am speaking to, once you hit your 40s it's all downhill! This year they are 45, 45, and 49!
Id say you're trim as well. But maybe if you showed yourself 10 years ago next to your present self we'd see what Sue is seeing.
ReplyDeleteFrail is a state of mind. You are only frail if you think you are. Keep on keeping on!
ReplyDeleteFrail? Fine, maybe; but pictures don't seem to include the life force, so I don't trust them. -Kate
ReplyDeleteFrail because you are not heavier? Nah, I don't think so. You keep on doing things that keep you moving. We all lose muscle mass as we age unless we specifically work hard at trying to maintain it.
ReplyDeleteYou look great!
Oh and Sue does too!
Sometimes I wish I could have a program to change things up like you did. Well done.
We all take our own photographic path. I like editing more than the actual picture-taking it seems.
DeleteYou both look amazing.
ReplyDeleteI don’t think you look frail, just slim. At almost 80, I am saying that you look good!
ReplyDeleteI agree, I don't think you look frail at all. Both of you look very well.
ReplyDeleteYour photo editing skills are far beyond me! And I thought you looked great, knowing you're about the same age as myself!
ReplyDeleteAI photo editing has been a game changer for me, opening up lots of possibilities my lack of skills and software previously prevented.
ReplyDelete