Great shot Alis! This would have been a perfect canidate for HDR. I love the fall colors. Looks like the walkway has a bit of a red tint. Theres a few spots that seem to be crushed to black a little bit -- a little fill light in ACR would help that.
Again, great shot!
Thanks, Kent! Wow! You are right on target. Actually I am not sure if you commented on the first file I uploaded or the one that is here currently because I noticed the red tint and changed it immediately but I might have been late.
Also, I agree with the black clipping point, I tried to be "aggressive", just did not know how much is enough!
This is actually supposed to be an HDR, I have three shots of it, but I am not really good at using Photomatrix and thought just use this middle shot to play around.
Thanks for the comments.
Alis
Hi Ali,
You don't need HDR for this kind of shot - more than enough DR in a RAW capture (and then some)
Nice composition - colours look great - BUT - you've over-sharpened the high-frequency components (making them frosty). I've added a blur over the image and then re-sharpened to give you an idea (unfortunately I can't get it any better without the original).
Thanks, Colin. Looks much better. I am still having difficulty with selecting the right setting for USM. But I am slowly reading the Fraiser's book will get there soon hopefully. The other reason I overdid it was that when I got home and looked at the images, I realized I did not focus on any specific point in the picture! I guess that is one thing I have to remember next time.
Also about the need for HDR, I agree with you that it is not needed in this image, except for those areas of sky showing in between the leaves that are basically blown out. There is more sky in these shots that I cropped for this paticular image and the HDR was planned to take care of the larger sky area on top of rest of them.
I am still trying to learn how to confidently carry all the gear with me and not trip. I had to try a few different postions to find the best way to carry the camera on top of the tripod. Hard!
Do your capture sharpening first (300/0.3) - creative sharpening 2nd (perhaps 40/4 for this kind of image) - THEN down-sample the image and do output sharpening if needed (probably something like 150/0.3 for this kind of image but that MAY give too much frosting). Best trick is to simply toggle the preview off and on several times and see what it does to the image.
If you're stopped down you normally won't have to worry too much about that - your DoF will take care of it.when I got home and looked at the images, I realized I did not focus on any specific point in the picture! I guess that is one thing I have to remember next time.
Yes - but that's going to look better than lowering the tones of the foliage - it's pretty normal for this kind of scene. You could always try recovering the tones with the under-exposed shot from the bracket you took.Also about the need for HDR, I agree with you that it is not needed in this image, except for those areas of sky showing in between the leaves that are basically blown out.
So long as my brackets are tight, I just hold it a bit "like a baby" with the business end in my left elbow (and left forearm reaching around from underneath) and my right arm grabbing the rest from over the top - seems to balance quite well. Wouldn't want to do it with a cheap ballhead though! (takes a little while to trust the mounting hardware with about 15 grands worth of camera and lens attached!).I am still trying to learn how to confidently carry all the gear with me and not trip. I had to try a few different postions to find the best way to carry the camera on top of the tripod. Hard!
The red cast seems to be gone I must have jumped the gun to critique.Actually I am not sure if you commented on the first file I uploaded or the one that is here currently because I noticed the red tint and changed it immediately but I might have been late.
It's a bit extreme for my taste. I think you can still accomplish the nice constrast you have without crushing the blacks. Some of the tree branches are going to black, which causes my eye to go stright to them, as it disrupts the flow of the image.Also, I agree with the black clipping point, I tried to be "aggressive", just did not know how much is enough!
I agree - that is what I was referring to. A strong blue sky would add an extra color element to the image that would really compliment it. I have a feeling that it was an overcast day, but nothing a little PP can't fix!
You've got guts! I got myself a cheap manfrotto tripod to hold me over until I can afford the Gitzo I want. It holds my 5dmkII with my 24-105mm fine at moderate angles. Extremes though it slips, and because if this I wouldn't dream of moving the camera while on the tripod. Quick-release and put the neckstrap on and just carry the tripod for me.
Well, it is BH-55 PCL for ballhead (Really Right Stuff) and GT3541LS Gitzo CF6X for tripod. I just followed your recommendation and I am happy with it. I can put my whole car on it!
Then I have the bracket for 70-200mm f/2.8 and that combination is really heavy. And what I noticed is that although the bracket to ball head attachment is nice and tight, the lens to camera attachment is not that great and it wobbles (trying to find the right word but it not as tight) so I was wondering what is the point of being so accurate with zero pixel drift for the ball head and tripod but having a loose connection somewhere else?
In that Real World Sharpenning book, I noticed a picture of Jeff shooting a sandbag on top of a long lens. I thought it is to prevent movement of the camera on the lens perhaps?
Now THAT'S a shot I'd like to see! (would certainly top the shot of me standing on mine!)
I get a bit of "rotational slop" in mine - is that what you mean?the lens to camera attachment is not that great and it wobbles (trying to find the right word but it not as tight) so I was wondering what is the point of being so accurate with zero pixel drift for the ball head and tripod but having a loose connection somewhere else?
Yes - I don't use one personally - if shutterspeeds are high enough I sometimes just lean down on the whole rig ("human sandbag"). They can also be used for :low level" tripods.In that Real World Sharpenning book, I noticed a picture with Jeff taking a picture on a long lens with a sandbag on top of the lens. I thought it is to prevent movement of the camera on the lens perhaps?
It rotates a little but I feel there is a gap between the two rings (on camera and on the lens) so the lens moves from one side to the other when I push it,not that much though but nevertheless it is there. May be it is my camera? Because I can feel it on more than one lens.
Since we're on the topic of carrying camera... What are your thoughts on carrying the camera "by the lens"? When I have the grip on my camera it is much easier to hold the camera while walking by the lens where it meets the camera body. It feels pretty sturdy - but if I'm going to tweak the mount over time I'd like to know.
I'd hold the heaviest bit as a rule