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12th May 2013, 10:16 AM
#1
tree of live
Hi,
had been at Valley Forge in January, was a foggy day and I was wowed by the lonsome trees in the fiels. At shooting I had a high contrast B&W in mind, shwoing all the organic shapes, forms and texture. So i did spend some time in PP to get the contrats as high as possible, or at least as high as I was able to get. I was not really happy with the outcome, luckely I found a "high contrast" protocol from Calvin Hollywood and I was pleased with the result.
Any C&C welcome, also tricks and tips for high contrast and B&W conversion (I used quadruplex in PP) welcome.
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12th May 2013, 03:06 PM
#2
Moderator
Re: tree of live
I like this very much. It captures the wonderful detail of the tree and does show us the fact that it is isolated in a large, relatively featureless landscape around it.
I do not know what you mean by 'quadruplex in PP'. Does the software you are using allow for the application of levels and curves? That is the first way I would think about for adjusting contrast.
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12th May 2013, 06:45 PM
#3
Re: tree of live
Hi Donald,
For adjusting the contrast I was not satisfied by using the typical tone-level adjustment tools in photoshop. I could not get the contrast I liked to have. Accidently I found a method from Calvin Hollywood and was very pleased with the results – especially for B&W.
I adjusted the contrast in the 16 bit TIF directly from the raw, the protocol of the Calvin Hollywood method I have found in a Scott Kelby book for CS5. After adjusting the contrast I convert the image into B&W using a quadruplet (sorry quadruplet not quadruplex) setting (in the duplet dialog box in the image/mode menu).
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