Last edited by Manfred M; 22nd September 2015 at 02:50 AM. Reason: Removed dust bunnies in sky
Really excellent, Manfred. Polarizer?
Nicely captured, very colorful.
Very nicely done street scene.
Very nice image. Looks like every color in the crayon box is in this one.
They sure have done that. I found a couple of images online in the winter and the colours seem to stick out even more in the snow:
http://www.skinet.com/ski/galleries/...=55593709&s=20
http://adventure.nationalgeographic....08_600x450.jpg
A really nice aspect, with the repeating patterns going down the street, leading you into the image.
How come your image looks crunchy, crispy? What do you do to them process-wise I mean...let us not even start with your past postings...just the shot taken from the ski lift and this one...I know...I know...start with a good sharp shot. If an image is already good, how can one makes it this crispy crunchy with meat sort of shot? Can't describe this very well, so I will just say, it is different than how flat the others compare to this...your shot got more "body" and I am not flattering you...what do you do, how do you do it, if you are willing to share some tips...hints..???
Very nice shot Manfred Did you use dehaze slider in ACR while processing the image ?
I shot most of my outdoor shots with a polarizer, that kills the glare and if I am pointing in the right direction, I get the bluer sky.
In ACR; I adjust the black point and white point to ensure there is no clipping on either end. If there are bright highlights or dark shadows, I also tweak the shadows and highlights slider, as required. I sharpen and adjust contrast. Add a touch of dehaze on any outdoor shot (around 5 -8) value unless the air temperature is below freezing and there is no haze. I will punch up the clarity and vibrance. If there are people in the shot, I usually keep these values below 15 and if there are not, I might go up to around 35 on both. I also add a slight vignette.
I will also sometimes punch up the sky / leaves / grass in ACR using the HSL/Grayscale and on the Luminance tab - play with the blue, aqua (sky) and yellow for leaves and grasses.
In Photoshop I dodge and burn to take down the highlights and shadows (I use blending modes / layer masks (multiply to darken areas) and screen modes to lighten). I use a soft brush with opacity of 15% - 25% to build up the look). I will sometimes duplicate the layer to increase the effect (the duplicate layer may have the opacity reduced, to get the level I want).
Finally, in some shots (the two of of the village had this) I use Nik Color Efex and add both the tonal contrast and skylight filters and will then reduce the opacity of these layers to tone down the effect, as required.
Keep coming back to this Manfred and chickening out of commenting - probably because I'm out of step with what has been said already. Very nice location and really good composition but to me, it's about half a stop under exposed and for my taste (and I stress the "my"), it is a little too saturated. Doesn't mean I don't like it though because I do.
You could be right about the exposure, John. Unfortunately, I'm editing on my laptop and the screen has a very strange FoV. Just a few degrees difference in the angle I am looking at the image makes it lighter or darker. I really won't be able to tell until I get home and see the image on my regular screen.
As for the oversaturation, that was done on purpose. I am trying to emphasize how artificial the whole place is. Mont Tremblant pedestrian village is a highly artificial, over the top place, and that is what I am trying to portray in this image.
Lovely shaot Manfred and very well edited. Thanks for the tips. I would clone out what looks like a few dust spots in the sky though, they are a little distracting.
Lovely shot, great colours and composition.