Please note that embedding has been disabled on the video. Not my doing. I reckon Youtube may have done it after a request by a third party. A clue is given by the logo that has appeared on the YouTube page.
Still, it could have been removed completely.
I was always unhappy with the end of the video and the artefacts on the text so I’ve added a bit to the end and done some tidying up.
I’m putting the blog into hibernation for a while. It’s about time I worked on different things rather than do the same old stuff. I’m not exactly learning anything new and I really need to move on.
I may put up an image or video from time to time but these will be few and far between.
Thanks to all the regulars for visiting.
Homes for votes transforms into No homes (for others) for (your) votes.
Update –
The key word there is of course “aspiration”; both Labour and the Tories deeply care about the aspirations of the upwardly-mobile lower and middle-classes, who demand less tax and policies tailored directly to them as they make up the all important swing voters, but for those on the council estates who make up the bulk of Labour’s vote, they can be played off, stigmatised and chastised for their fecklessness and welfare dependency, which is naturally all their own fault. Much more by Septicisle on Obsolete.
not for use on any commercial site or blog without permission.
Why this style? Low res pics for sources and skin matching is very difficult to get the ‘faceswap’ right. Therefore, after trying best to match skintones, the image was enlarged by about five times and then a halftone pattern was applied. The enlarging is done because halftone patterns will not work on small images and retain enough detail. (size of halftone in pixels vs. image size.)
When the pic is taken back to a smaller size, the image is interpolated and the appearance of the pattern is (mostly) retained.
Then, it’s a matter of taste as to saturation, contrast and sharpness.