Got it! John (2) got me inspired with this negative vignette thing and I like for its dreamy scene. Of course not all scenes can have this effect...maybe dependant on the mood of the moment...I had very little shots in my Florida trip compared to my other trips.
Thank you John...I am getting as much feedback as I can from all your your comments and suggestions and make me busy in the meantime while waiting for the eagle trips...appreciate the extra comments and suggestions.The other two are fine, consider enhancing the lights/darks to get a more 3-D effect.
Nice efforts.
I remember using the lines I don't know what it's called, but I don't think we have such a different of the camera's electronic level. I was actually kicking myself for not bringing it with me...so if it is only the horizon that line that I mentioned works very well too...
Thanks Mike for the extra comments...'Do appreciate your putting me to right at times...but Dave is harsher so I like him better...For those who are not used to using the camera's electronic level, consider that I use mine almost all of the time. When I'm shooting handheld, I use the level displayed in the viewfinder. When I'm using a tripod, I use the level displayed in Live View.
Thanks for commenting DAve and sharing me your preference. I do appreciate it very much...
And now for some corrections...
1 this is the original shot with suggested correction...nothing special really but just a correction of the black and white point...I hope this is enough crop...
2 This is another version of the same bridge...
3 This is my big problem image...look at the railing...everything is level except that...
Thank you all for another look...I'd love to learn how to correct that railing...if you may want to teach me...
Hi Izzie,
I take you mean you want it to be straight, not curved?
TBH, I wouldn't worry about it - I don't know that place and for all I know the rail and concrete below might really be curved like that.
If you were to try to straighten it (by warping), it would probably have undesirable effects everything else in the lower left corner (getting worse towards the edge of frame). To combat that you'd have needed to duplicate a layer of the uncorrected image, plus the warped layer, then mask so that the best bits of each show through where necessary, hoping to get away with the joins being invisible in the concrete deck, sky and people, with a bit of cloning to fix any 'double appearances'.
Likely too much work to be worth it in my opinion.
Although you could try as a learning experience of course
It would be an iterative process and I can't really give any better guidance than play with it and see how you get on.
HTH, Dave
PS Good job on the acorns Geoff
I like them all!
Hello, Izzie. Although vignetes are a personal taste (some will love them, while some will just hate them), I think they worked in this image (#1), drawing the viewer's attention to the bridge line, which is the subject of the image.
On #2, as some fellows mentioned, it lacks depth of field. Even so, it is a beautiful image.
Nice colours on #3.
Thanks for sharing and nice job!
Cheers,
Izzie, sorry for the lateness in replying to your PM but the site has been unavailable for most of today. However, for what it is worth...........
The distortion in the railing in your restaurant image can't really be corrected using the push/pull adjustments in the PS Edit/ Transform options. You will have to resort to using Edit/Puppet Warp. Something like this:
1.Open the image in P.S. and duplicate it as a second layer (either in the Layers drop down menu or right click on the layers dialogue on the RHS of the screen).
2. Lasso a rough selection around the rail. Include the supports.
3. Go to Edit/Puppet Warp and select it.
4. Using a left mouse click, pin those parts of the rail that you want to straighten. I selected the top and the bottom plus the centre of the kink. Pull the pinned points just sufficient to straighten the rail. In this case I found the most effective way was to slightly move both the kink and the rail at the base of the image.
5. looks something like:
6. It may take several tries but eventually the rail will straighten. Take care that you don't bend the rail supports.
7. once the rail has been straightened, select the whole image and use Edit/ Transform/ Distort to straighten the verticals on each side. Do this at the top of the image so that you don't disturb the rail. You can also stretch the top to take out some of the height distortion caused by angling your super wide slightly upwards.
8. Finally, you can correct some of the WA elongation in the side of the restaurant using the same process.
9. That should give you something like this as a final image:
Hope all this helps.
Last edited by John 2; 7th November 2015 at 04:40 PM.
New additions are splendid
Yes...he did a good job on it, Dave...I really like it...I suppose that means superimposing the sharp one for the blurred one and brushing it on the blurred areas...just guessing here...
The road is actually going downwards from the sidewalk slightly. I cannot correct what is natural. What I need help correcting is the rail itself. I know it can be done in Photoshop but I forgot how to. I was using the distort tool without going anywhere...
Kris...thank you for the comment and the sighs...I am glad it is not in my backyard...and even so, the boys will not let me rake leaves because I get frustrated using the rake like using a fork to do my garden, when they have this leaf blower and cruncher to take care of it...most frustrating is that when I do use the rake, they just watch me until I get PMS raking it...and the fun begins, for them that is...so I stopped doing it.
Thanks Joe -- it seems I cannot do anything wrong in your eyes when it comes to my shoot.
Thanks all for the edits, the comments and the chuckles...appreciate it very much, especially this morning...
I have taken note, John and I am copying your message in Word so I can follow it step by step till I got it. I completely forgot about the Puppet Warp to tell you the truth.I was using the Distort and Perspective to no avail, so I just dumped the whole image, found something worthy to share and added the image I needed correction to badly...
Yes, this helps me a lot to do some more practice on the Warp tool too...I have learned a lot from you too -- so much.
Thank you .... thank you... thank you again for the helping hand...I do appreciate it very much. I had wanted to respond this post earlier but CiC system was down for a while...