Cropped a little from both top and bottom. Better?
http://i49.tinypic.com/2ylso7t.jpg
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Cropped a little from both top and bottom. Better?
http://i49.tinypic.com/2ylso7t.jpg
I have to agree that cropping did improve this image a lot!
Thanks for pointing that out to me, Donald!
The updated image is definitely an attention grabber. When I looked at it in full screen I noted a power line in the top right hand side. Is it removable?
I'm soooo out of inspiration, but I saw these on the side of the road, and...."well, why not?"....
"End of the Summer"
http://i50.tinypic.com/2ikppg7.jpg
A post process experiment from a jpg taken with a P&S.
Maybe I oversaturated the colours, but I do like it.
I'm gonna try something similar this fall with my Nikon D5000, once the leaves are getting a little more colour.
OOC: When I took this, I actually thought it looked good.....:rolleyes:
http://i49.tinypic.com/1t7kgo.jpg
Reworked - Mostly in LR4 - Better or worse?
http://i47.tinypic.com/df8t36.jpg
The crop is exactly what I would have done. Possibly a fraction dark on the shadows though.
ps. I've got a few rather similar shots which I've put to one side. A couple might work eventually but I have already ditched most of them.
I've been experimenting with the lighting filter in PhotoShop, until I sorta figured out how it works.
I tried it on this picture of my granddaughter and her boyfriend - in serious conversation on the back porch.
Here are the before and after. Does the crop work?
OOC - adjusted in LR4:
http://i46.tinypic.com/8xu0yq.jpg
Some blemishes removed, cropped and lighting filter applied at opacity 85%:
http://i46.tinypic.com/5lwjgk.jpg
I agree with a crop; you have to do something about that pole, but I think I would have retained just a fraction more space at the top and left. But it is difficult because, ideally, you don't want half an ear in the scene. :D
Lighting effects have rarely worked for me; but I haven't done much with them lately. I can see what you are attempting but it has come out a little on the 'gloomy side' for me. How about a slight tweak with Curves to just boost the highlights a little more?
Thankd Geoff.
I must admit I hae a tendency to edit "towards the dark side", but I'll try your suggestion.
Lighting effects had a very tedious learning curve for me, but being retired, I got plenty of time to play and learn the PhotoShop Tricks I never knew before.
PS. That does NOT mean I'm a gloomy person!:)
Kris, I agree with Geoff that the edit has come out a little on the gloomy side. If you do a reworked version. I'll look forward to seeing it. I've yet to do anything with Photoshop's lighting effects. (I'm still working on more basic things.:D)
I only had the chance of this one shot, before the little guy/gal jumped out of sight.
http://i49.tinypic.com/28hg9eb.jpg
That is often the way with wildlife. I often take one quick shot at a greater distance than would be ideal; then try to sneak closer for more shots. If the subject won't stay and pose for me, at least I have something in the camera.
Good sharp focus here.
I don't try wildlife shooting very often, but whenever i do I appreciate how difficult it can be. I'm lucky in that in choosing things like walls and mountains and trees, etc, I've got subjects that stay where they are.
Bug on a Texas Rose.
The last flowers of the year. They start getting buds in early October and bloom in November, sometimes as late as mid-December.
I tried out a screw-on close-up lens (Opteka 2.2x Tele) that I bought a few weeks ago.
Used it on the kit-lens and was able to get a lot closer. The location of the flower makes using a tripod and longer lens a little awkward.
No idea what kind of bug this is....:(
Here is my favourite of the set I took yesterday:
http://i47.tinypic.com/2dkmtsz.jpg
And my husbands' favourite:
http://i46.tinypic.com/el5zxk.jpg
Nice shots. The bug looks like a katydid to me.