Nice image.
Hi,
Warm welcome to the CiC forums from me.
It would be nice to see larger.
My impression is that it is perhaps just a bit too colourful, I might reduce the saturation a little (if it were mine).
It looks like you have levelled the shot on the major horizontal line (across the top of the arches), but certain other areas appear sloping - I'm not sure what the answer is, it may depend upon the cause and any corrections you have already applied.
Other than that, there is much to commend you on; the composition, exposure and foreground interest provided by the others viewing this impressive building.
Is Gowtham your name?
If so, for clarity, could you do me a favour please?
Could you click Settings (right at the top),
then Edit Profile (on left)
and put your first name in the Real Name field,
then click the Save Changes button below and to right,
this helps everyone give you more personal and relevant answers - thanks in advance.
All the best, Dave
Welcome Goutham
Nice image. I have never seen Mysore palace in night lights
Hi Gowtham,
I hope you don't mind, but I did a little tweak (and I'm hardly the expert). I left the saturation where it was (as it was probably part of the composition here?), and just moved the temp slider more toward blue and pulled the tint away from pink a little which brought the yellows down a little, and brought a deeper blue to the sky (it appears more of a natural colour temp now... maybe?).
I also tweaked the cropping to make it a little more symmetrical which is really important for an image that is using symmetry as its main compositional strength, even slightly out looks sloppy, though I think you did a pretty good job to start with. Slight straighten too, but as Dave said, there is something going on there, it still looks a little off (camera was probably not exactly squared with the building).
Cheers,
Pete
Thank you Pete, i liked your edit, may be the palace lacks a little majesticness(?) since color temp is slightly cooler now.
Sorry for missing the symmetry on the image i tried my best. For straightening of the image, i always have this trouble while clicking buildings/architectures that image never looked straight, any ways to overcome this. And what is this 'camera was probably not exactly squared with the building' some sort of technique???
Gowtham - to get square shots of a building, your camera must be square to the building and level. If you are close, minor issues can be corrected in PP. I use the skew tool in Photoshop.
The issue with having the camera level will be getting the whole building in the frame (the top will get cropped off), which is where Perspective Correcting (Shift / Tilt) lenses come in. PC lenses are expensive and usually only work on high end full-frame cameras.
Hi Gowtham,
To follow up on the getting a shot as 'square-on' as possible while shooting when using a 'normal' (non-PC) lens.
A "hot shoe level" (google it for results relevant to you in Chennai) is something I use to help me keep my camera level (left/right) and also the lens horizontal (up/down) when it matters (such as shooting a building) - even/especially if shooting handheld (but useful also if you tripod doesn't have a spirit level built-in).
Keeping the lens horizontal may result in being unable to get the top spires in the frame unless you use a wider angle of view (zoom out lens) or move further back. This will also result in some wasted pixels capturing lots of the ground between you and the building as these will need to be cropped off during post processing.
However, for certain buildings and surroundings, you may just have to aim upwards a bit (and correct in PS) though, but if the shot is correctly left/right level and you were exactly centred, this becomes far simpler.
Cheers, Dave
Thank you for the suggestions Dave. I am in look out for 'Hot Shoe Level' at my place.
Cheers.