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Thread: Improving sunrise photography

  1. #21
    maloufn's Avatar
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    Re: Improving sunrise photography

    Quote Originally Posted by Colin Southern View Post
    I'd suggest a number of things ...

    1. Make it panoramic - scenes with long horizontal lines streatch well.

    2. Kill the writing - it drags the eye to the edge of the frame rather than lets it flow through the image

    3. Be careful with your colours / levels / sharpening

    Improving sunrise photography
    Dear Colin,

    I didnt get a reply from you as to how you transformed this photo into a panorama on site I would be
    greatful if you could help.

    regards

    Nasseem
    you could help me out.

  2. #22

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    Re: Improving sunrise photography

    Quote Originally Posted by maloufn View Post
    Dear Colin,

    I didnt get a reply from you as to how you transformed this photo into a panorama on site I would be
    greatful if you could help.

    regards

    Nasseem
    you could help me out.
    Hi Nesseem,

    My apologies - I meant to reply, but it's one of those things that "slipped through the cracks".

    In terms of the panorama aspect ratio, I start by cropping as agressively as I can - many panoramic shots are wide angle by definition, and these often have excesses of sky and/or foreground anyway, so they're relatively easy to crop away. Regardless though - with what's left - it's a simple case of just resampling in Photoshop, with the constrain proportions option disabled; as a rule, images start to look panoramic at 2:1 - look very panoramic at 3:1 and 4:1 is about the limit in my experience.

    Generally images that already have horzontal lines stretch fairly well - even those with people in them.

    In terms of other enhancements, I gave it a quick tweak in ACR and a subtle sharpen - unfortunately, not a lot I can do with a low-res JPEG, but hopefully you got the idea I was trying to present.

  3. #23
    maloufn's Avatar
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    Re: Improving sunrise photography

    Quote Originally Posted by Colin Southern View Post
    Hi Nesseem,

    My apologies - I meant to reply, but it's one of those things that "slipped through the cracks".

    In terms of the panorama aspect ratio, I start by cropping as agressively as I can - many panoramic shots are wide angle by definition, and these often have excesses of sky and/or foreground anyway, so they're relatively easy to crop away. Regardless though - with what's left - it's a simple case of just resampling in Photoshop, with the constrain proportions option disabled; as a rule, images start to look panoramic at 2:1 - look very panoramic at 3:1 and 4:1 is about the limit in my experience.

    Generally images that already have horzontal lines stretch fairly well - even those with people in them.

    In terms of other enhancements, I gave it a quick tweak in ACR and a subtle sharpen - unfortunately, not a lot I can do with a low-res JPEG, but hopefully you got the idea I was trying to present.
    THank you so much Colin. I can understand the 2:1 or 3:1 ratio for panoramas now. Looking at your edit and comparing it to my original, it seems like you have not cropped but stretched the image to achieve the desired ratio! Am I wrong?

    Regards

    Nasseem

  4. #24
    Peter Ryan's Avatar
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    Re: Improving sunrise photography

    Just wondering Nasseem if you have found what you were looking for. The question was out there but I am not sure what it was that you were actually trying to find out.

  5. #25

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    Re: Improving sunrise photography

    Quote Originally Posted by maloufn View Post
    THank you so much Colin. I can understand the 2:1 or 3:1 ratio for panoramas now. Looking at your edit and comparing it to my original, it seems like you have not cropped but stretched the image to achieve the desired ratio! Am I wrong?

    Regards

    Nasseem
    I can't remember - but I probably just stretched most of it.

  6. #26
    maloufn's Avatar
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    Re: Improving sunrise photography

    Quote Originally Posted by Colin Southern View Post
    I can't remember - but I probably just stretched most of it.
    Sorry Colin. What exact steps do you take to stretch a photo without cropping??

    Regards

    Nasseem

  7. #27
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    Re: Improving sunrise photography

    Quote Originally Posted by Peter Ryan View Post
    Just wondering Nasseem if you have found what you were looking for. The question was out there but I am not sure what it was that you were actually trying to find out.
    Hi Peter. Sorry I have not been back to you. I have been taking some portraits at our Clay Target Club of members and did a function the other day. I have not competed or looked at the site for a few days. I was just trying to know from Colin how he stretched my photo that he edited inthis thread. I didnt know you could do that and still dont know how. I have just asked Colin again as to the steps needed to stretch a photo without cropping.

    Hope you are well.

    Nasseem

  8. #28
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    Re: Improving sunrise photography

    Always well Nasseem, but my question was more about your original post not following up on Colin's stretching. What was it you were looking for originally?

  9. #29
    maloufn's Avatar
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    Re: Improving sunrise photography

    Quote Originally Posted by Peter Ryan View Post
    Always well Nasseem, but my question was more about your original post not following up on Colin's stretching. What was it you were looking for originally?
    I just wanted some ideas on how to improve my sunrise shots.

    Nasseem

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