Same subject, 3 different pics
Discussion
It's that old devil called composition. My thoughts:
Pic 1: I like the blue colour, but am bothered by two things: first, the sun smack behind the boat on the left, and second, the boat on the right sitting in the dark and pointing out of the picture.
Pic2: Better, but I find that blitzed sky too distracting
Pic 3: The sun has dropped a bit and the camera is breathing again. IMO this is the best picture, but it needs cropping for better effect - I'd make it portrait format, taking 10% off the left and 30% off the right. That way the eye concentrates on the boat and sun, and everything fits more comfortably I think.
4p spent. Actually, make that 5p
Hoe this is some help?
Pic 1: I like the blue colour, but am bothered by two things: first, the sun smack behind the boat on the left, and second, the boat on the right sitting in the dark and pointing out of the picture.
Pic2: Better, but I find that blitzed sky too distracting
Pic 3: The sun has dropped a bit and the camera is breathing again. IMO this is the best picture, but it needs cropping for better effect - I'd make it portrait format, taking 10% off the left and 30% off the right. That way the eye concentrates on the boat and sun, and everything fits more comfortably I think.
4p spent. Actually, make that 5p
Hoe this is some help?
Out of the original three i like the first one best, although it could have a few samll things done to make it better - lighten the big boat on the right, and clone out the dingy being towed behind the other one. But the cropped version of photo 3 is easily the best overall, very nice!
All lovely shots.
A quick 2min job that I've done is.
1. Create an image composite (ie clone image, and lighten one version, use a gradient to blend the 2). This compensates the exposure on the boat whilst keeping that lovely sky tone.
2. Crop
I've probably overcooked the boat a bit because my work TFT isn't particularly good.
Steve
A quick 2min job that I've done is.
1. Create an image composite (ie clone image, and lighten one version, use a gradient to blend the 2). This compensates the exposure on the boat whilst keeping that lovely sky tone.
2. Crop
I've probably overcooked the boat a bit because my work TFT isn't particularly good.
Steve
fatsteve said:
All lovely shots.
A quick 2min job that I've done is.
1. Create an image composite (ie clone image, and lighten one version, use a gradient to blend the 2). This compensates the exposure on the boat whilst keeping that lovely sky tone.
2. Crop
![]()
I've probably overcooked the boat a bit because my work TFT isn't particularly good.
Steve
That looks very nice indeed!
I need to get myself a photoshop book so I can learn to do some of these techniques. Any suggestions?
V6GTO said:
Phil,
Scott Kelby is the author you want.
Martin.
Or here www.luminous-landscape.com/tutorials/digital-blending.shtml
I've played with this alot recently and it works much better if you use originals, ie exposure bracketting (1 shot exposed for highlights and 1 exposed for shadows).
You can achive the effect with PS (that's how I did Lisa's image), but the quality won't be as good since you tend to blow the highlights or introduce too much noise
Steve
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