Reshoot.
Now that would be a trick!
Use Photoshop
Image - Image Rotation - Arbitrary - close image in frustration
Now leave your computer; pick up your camera and walk around to the other side of your wife and shoot
Hi Ganesan, you can turn the photograph into a cinemagraph in Photoshop by using the techniques described in this link...
http://lesterbanks.com/2011/05/how-t...after-effects/
The result is less than a video but more than a still image.
For some more examples, take a look at some of the work by Jamie Back on this link...
http://www.amusingplanet.com/2011/04...otography.html
Last edited by FrankMi; 24th September 2011 at 03:45 PM.
Have you tried looking at the back of the computer, Ganesan.
Didn't work for me either!
I tried this on you picture but it didn't work
Click on the links below, and when it comes up, click again on the picture, and hold - drag your mouse in any direction (up, down, right, left) and the picture will give you a 360 degree view.
http://www.utah3d.net/panoramas_2/AztecButte_swf.html
And very nice she is too, welcome (both of you) to the CiC forums.
The most obvious problem with the above shot is that having been taken in a forest with a sunlit tree canopy, the light has a lot of green cast to it - this might be correctable to an extent with PP, but I wonder whether a spot of something called fill flash would help.
You could probably achieve this even with the on camera flash, but with significant negative flash exposure compensation so as not to wash out your wife's face, nor render the background too dark - I notice from EXIF this was shot at 1/100s at f/5.6 iso 3200 and 135mm.
Colin maybe able to advise better on a good way to proceed, although if we're not careful, it may involve an armful of extra strobelights and remote triggers
Here's a version with just a manual adjustment of white balance by eye and a bit of a sharpen;
Better?
Cheers,