Originally Posted by
DanK
3 meters! That's out of our league, although we did have a winter a few years back when the bank on the side of my driveway was taller than me.
For several years, I purchased cut flowers to do inside photography, but I fell out of the habit. I need to give myself a kick in the rear to start again.
I've lately done a bit of experimenting with ways of adding texture. I've largely stopped using LR/ACR clarity, except at very low levels. It includes a midtone contrast adjustment, and it's a fairly coarse and heavy handed effect. I've found that the texture adjustment, which supposedly works at a higher frequency (somewhere between clarity and sharpening) and appears not to much around with midtone contrast, is very subtle and can be increased to very high levels without looking artificial.
The third tool I use is unsharp mask in photoshop. The standard advice is radius 50, threshold 0, amount to taste, but I've just started systematically varying the radius, ranging from 35 to 65 px. My tentative conclusion is that the best result depends on the frequency of detail in the image--coarser detail calls for a larger radius. However, I've done so little experimenting so far that I don't have confidence in that conclusion. What I'm going to do for now is to try a few different settings for a given image.
USM has another advantage, which doesn't matter for white petals: you can boost texture without increasing saturation by using a luminosity blend mode. I typically do that, although I sometimes replicate the layer, setting one for a normal blend and one for luminosity, and then reducing opacity to avoid overkill.