Photomontage is a complex process that involves RenderIT taking your designs from sketch to a 3D photo realistic image and then placing it on a photo (provided by yourself).
This process will help you attain a better sense of how your building will look in its actual context!
To have a completed photomontage prepared for you, first send us a high resolution digital photograph.
Then contact our team to complete the same steps as described in the architectural rendering heading.
Remember the the size of the completed image is dependent on the resolution of the photograph that you provide us with.
Photomontage is the process (and result) of making a composite picture by cutting and joining a number of photographs.
The English photographer Henry Peach Robinson (1830-1901) is credited with making the first photomontages, soon after starting his career in 1857. Many of the early examples of fine-art photomontage consist of photographed elements superimposed on watercolours, a combination returned to by (e.g.) George Grosz in about 1915. He was part of the Dada movement in Berlin which was instrumental in making montage into a modern art-form.
Other methods for combining pictures are also called photomontage, such as combination printing (the printing from more than one negative on a single piece of printing paper (e.g. O. G. Rejlander, 1857), front-projection and computer montage techniques.
Go to our Rendering Questionnaire and you will be provided a list of details regarding your project before you upload your file.
Have a look at our Portfolios and Suggested rendering Price List
| MetaFilter posts tagged with photomontage Posts tagged with 'photomontage' at MetaFilter. Photo Montages of Tsunehisa Kimura by filthy light thief 25 Mar 2011 at 8:02pm Tsunehisa Kimura (1928-2008) was a Japanese artist best known for his photomontage art. There doesn't seem to be much about him in online in English, beyond reiterations of the same three images that BLDG BLOG copied from the 1979 book Visual Scandals, and a few short pages that are related to an interview on Australian radio back in 2002. Yet his imagery has caught the eye of various musical groups over the years, including Midnight Oil, Paul Schütze, and most recently, Cut/Copy join the fanclub, with their cover for Zonoscope. Odd fact 1: Paul Schütze, Midnight Oil and Cut/Copy are all Australian. Odd fact 2: in the Cut/Copy making of an album video that is featured in the last link above the break, you can see the possible source of their cover art inspiration: Climax Blues Band - Flying the Flag, where Tsunehisa Kimura's New York waterfall/skyline has been modified for the cheerier, now featuring an out-of-scale sailboat and a happy rainbow coming out of the waterfall. The Forgotten Surrealist by adamvasco 27 Mar 2010 at 6:07pm Je suis lesbien declares the artist. His legs are encased in black stockings, secured to a suspender belt; his waist is constricted by a tight corset. On his head he wears a veil and a black mask. His fingers press a switch, a shutter clicks and Pierre Molinier, the forgotten Surrealist, is caught on camera forever. An incestual necrophiliac, his work specialised in Fetish photomontage. An Introduction by Jean-Luc Mercié. (NSFW) Cut & Paste. by grapefruitmoon 29 Sep 2009 at 8:41am Cut & Paste - International exhibition of contemporary collage and assemblage is showing in Stockholm, Sweden (and also, on the interwebs). See it in person now through October 10. The Man Who Pissed Off Hitler by CheeseDigestsAll 11 May 2009 at 12:11am Artist John Heartfield was one of those who recognized the threat of Nazism early on. Remarkably, he created his anti-fascist art inside Germany, until 1933 when Hitler came to power. He continued to pointedly satirize the Reich (and those who made it possible, as his bitter image of the League of Nations illustrates) from exile in Czechoslovakia. The nature of his work makes it very clear that Hitler's goals and intentions were obvious well before the war. (via) Winston Smith by sjvilla79 23 Nov 2005 at 11:14pm ArtFilter: Treat yourself to the photomontages of Winston Smith. [MI] Alessandro Bavari: surreal photography by Slithy_Tove 14 Jul 2005 at 7:26am Surreal photography by Alessandro Bavari. [via] Some images NSFW. Cut With The Kitchen Knife by grapefruitmoon 28 Jan 2005 at 5:55pm Hannah Höch was one of the great queer female artists of the 20th century and one of the brilliant minds behind the Berlin DaDa Movement. One of the pioneers of photomontage, Höch's work is still among the best in the medium even today. Cut & Paste: A History of Photomontage by plep 20 Nov 2004 at 6:48am Cut & Paste: A History of Photomontage. CollageMania by feelinglistless 9 Aug 2004 at 8:14pm Collagemania. 'collage, photomontage, assemblage' The unsettling world of Viktor Koen by acrobat 23 Jul 2004 at 10:15am Composite images. The unsettling world of Viktor Koen. Age Maps - photo surgery by madamjujujive 2 Feb 2004 at 11:34am Age Maps - photographer Bobby Neele Adams fuses two photos of the same person from different points in their life, with an unsettling effect. He uses the same technique for couples, a unique portrait idea for you all you coupled Mefites. (nsfw, bare breasts) His Broken Wings series is also worth noting. Collage Machine! by taz 21 Nov 2003 at 7:30am Collage Machine from the National Gallery of Art. Click images to add; drag into place; click the green tab to bring an element forward, click red to send it backward; use the controls at the bottom to resize, flip, rotate and fade elements; see if you can ever, ever stop. |

