Originally Posted by
Dave Humphries
Hi Tejal,
I basically agre with the preferences and suggestions Izzie made.
For me:
In #1, the background boats are equally as sharp as the women and some intersect the main subject and are of similar lightness and colour
#2 solves the 'boats overlapping head' issue of #1 - well done, although the background is still too sharp for my liking. The shot is clearly not level
#3 has slightly better (softer) background because the primary subject is that bit closer and you have focussed on her - the bridge helps with context - you have the boats directly behind the subject, but it is almost OK here because the relative position, sharpness, tone and colour of the two are sufficiently different. This shot is also not level, although better than #2
I don't know what PP software you have or even the camera, lens and aperture used as there is no EXIF data available.
If I were processing these I would be using Photoshop CC with ACR 9.1 and be sure that the Lens Profile geometric correction feature was 'on' to correct the evident barrel distortion of the lens. I am guessing it was a fairly wide angle lens and the subjects were shot from quite close quarters, hence the excessive Depth of Field (and geometric distortion).
For capturing work stories like this in a single shot with multiple subjects, it helps if you can show the various stages - e.g. to show an empty bowl, one being filled and one being carried. You have achieved this in #3, although there is room for slight improvement (the empty bowl is rather small in frame and partially hidden).
I cannot claim that I would have thought of all these things myself while shooting the scene, but that's the benefit of hindsight and having time to really analyse a shot, so please don't be discouraged. If both you and I shot such a scene today, we'd both make a better job of it than before I had written this.
I hope those thoughts help, Dave