Helpful Posts Helpful Posts:  0
Results 1 to 7 of 7

Thread: Scotney Castle

  1. #1
    New Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2012
    Location
    Greenhithe, Kent
    Posts
    7
    Real Name
    Daniel Brampton

    Scotney Castle

    One of my first hdr attempts. The question is, is it any good?
    Scotney Castle

  2. #2
    Moderator Donald's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Location
    Glenfarg, Scotland
    Posts
    21,402
    Real Name
    Just add 'MacKenzie'

    Re: Scotney Castle

    Daniel

    You haven't over-cooked the tone mapping. Personally, I am not so keen on seeing these 'over-cooked' images from those practicing HDR techniques.

    But what I find most impressive about this is the extent to which you have got a 3D feel into it. When I first looked at it I saw the first floor windows of the house as, literally, sticking out from the wall of the house.

    Other point for consideration is that, given you've shot it a very wide angle 918mm) you have distortion at both the left and right hand sides. The left-hand side doesn't seem such a distraction, but the dominant role of that round tower in the image makes its distortion very apparent. It's a case of deciding whether you live with this and justify on artistic grounds, or seek to correct it.

  3. #3
    FrankMi's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2011
    Location
    Fort Mill, South Carolina, USA
    Posts
    6,294
    Real Name
    Frank Miller

    Re: Scotney Castle

    I find the subject quite fascinating! It looks like a dilapidated and a well maintained building in the same structure. As Donald says, the well maintained building appears to be almost popping out of the dilapidated one like a crustacean breaking out of its shell.

  4. #4
    kdoc856's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2011
    Location
    Columbus, Ohio, USA
    Posts
    1,960
    Real Name
    Kevin

    Re: Scotney Castle

    Daniel,

    That is a superb effort. You took a very measured approach to your tone-mapping, and I know from personal experience that that can be a hard exercise in self-discipline (in not getting carried away). I personally alternate in truly enjoying and being modestly irritated by much of what is called HDR, due to the runaway tone-mapping. I think youv'e used the technique very well. I very much enjoy architectural images, but dont do a great deal of it because the distortions render me temporarily insane- so many comopromises. congrats on a nice job

    Kevin

  5. #5

    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    South Devon, UK
    Posts
    14,513

    Re: Scotney Castle

    I agree that the HDR is subtle, Daniel, just the way I like it.

    But my eyes were instantly drawn to the distortion, which Donald mentioned. If it was shot from a low angle I think it would be acceptable but from that angle, I think I would have a go at 'stretching and cropping' to try to force the verticals more upright.

  6. #6
    Fit's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Location
    Minnesota USA
    Posts
    443
    Real Name
    Chris

    Re: Scotney Castle

    I like the end result. Unlike several here- I tend to prefer the HDR images that are obvious, whether ultra-dramatic, fanciful whatever.
    At first glance and my novice eye, I'd say "why bother with HDR" if you cannot tell. But to Donald's point, perhaps it is giving it depth that I (again, novice) didn't know to ascribe to HDR.

  7. #7
    Moderator Dave Humphries's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Windsor, Berks, UK
    Posts
    16,748
    Real Name
    Dave Humphries :)

    Re: Scotney Castle

    Hi Daniel,

    It is good, yes.

    I like the composition, but as others; not the perspective distortion and for me, there is a bit of a halo peeping mainly around the round feature.

    Had I shot it, I'd probably shoot to retain saturation in the sky, then bring up the mid-tones in PP, which at full framing and iso 100 shouldn't give any noise issues.

    I did get a surprise seeing it from another angle when I googled it to see where it was (all that water).

    Cheers,

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •