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Thread: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

  1. #1

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    Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    ISO 100 ~ Shutter Speed 1/1.6s ~ F/ 14 ~ Natural Light ~ 14 Shot Stack in Fuji ~ Sony Alpha a58 ~ Tamron 90mm 272E

    M'Lady bought a black hot plate. We haven't cooked on it yet but it seems to me it makes a good bg. With a better tripod and the wireless shutter release I can finally do consistent stacking. I was wondering about such a rough bg but I think the fg and bg separate nicely?

    Brian

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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    That background is not working for me Brian, I think it competes with the watch too much.

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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Quote Originally Posted by Stagecoach View Post
    That background is not working for me Brian, I think it competes with the watch too much.
    Fair enough. For me it's complimentary rather than competitive. But then I do have unusual tastes.

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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Quote Originally Posted by JBW View Post
    Fair enough. For me it's complimentary [complementary?] rather than competitive. But then I do have unusual tastes.
    Nice watch, is it an Elgin? Here's mine:

    http://kronometric.org/tcw/mec/PW1876/mas.html

    As a watch-collector/fixer/seller although not so much these days, I feel qualified to comment. The lighting has placed too much contrast in the middle of the body and not enough at the right side, IMHO.

    With watches, I use two lamps, one each side, with tracing paper diffusers interposed, plus white cards at the back. Not saying you should, just sayin'. With a single light source, maybe a reflector would help.
    Last edited by xpatUSA; 7th December 2017 at 04:41 AM.

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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Quote Originally Posted by xpatUSA View Post
    Nice watch, is it an Elgin? Here's mine:

    http://kronometric.org/tcw/mec/PW1876/mas.html

    As a watch-collector/fixer/seller although not so much these days, I feel qualified to comment. The lighting has placed too much contrast in the middle of the body and not enough at the right side, IMHO.

    With watches, I use two lamps, one each side, with tracing paper diffusers interposed, plus white cards at the back. Not saying you should, just sayin'. With a single light source, maybe a reflector would help.
    Nope it's a Dumal. Your's is a whole different quality.

    You know me I like natural light. But a reflector would have made a difference
    Last edited by JBW; 7th December 2017 at 10:15 AM.

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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Brian,

    The surface could work but I think you need to bring out the detail of the watch. Nice effort.

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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Quote Originally Posted by Shadowman View Post
    Brian,

    The surface could work but I think you need to bring out the detail of the watch. Nice effort.
    I'm working on it.

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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Excellent image; i really liked this; i feel you are more of an inside person than outside, at least in the realm of photography

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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Quote Originally Posted by Wavelength View Post
    Excellent image; i really liked this; i feel you are more of an inside person than outside, at least in the realm of photography
    really? time will tell.

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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Brian, you could spend hours dodging and burning this. I think you should - great fun also.
    Cheers Ole

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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Quote Originally Posted by mugge View Post
    Brian, you could spend hours dodging and burning this. I think you should - great fun also.
    Cheers Ole
    it would certainly be good practice.

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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    I lean toward Nandakumar and to your original thoughts. Not every image has to fit neatly into a popular prescription. For example many acclaimed winter scenes have light backgrounds as well as light subjects. This one is very similar but at the dark end instead. The fg and bg are nicely separated and I love the shading. The only thing I might try to tweak is the degree to which it goes to dark on the right side - maybe a little less of that would be better but it's still very nice.
    Last edited by Lon Howard; 8th December 2017 at 07:57 AM.

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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Quote Originally Posted by mugge View Post
    Brian, you could spend hours dodging and burning this. I think you should - great fun also.
    Cheers Ole
    I could in deed. And I just might take up your suggestion

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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Quote Originally Posted by Lon Howard View Post
    I lean toward Nandakumar and to your original thoughts. Not every image has to fit neatly into a popular prescription. For example many acclaimed winter scenes have light backgrounds as well as light subjects. This one is very similar but at the dark end instead. The fg and bg are nicely separated and I love the shading. The only thing I might try to tweak is the degree to which it goes to dark on the right side - maybe a little less of that would be better but it's still very nice.
    I wondered about the shading. Everything I read tells me that there should be one area of really black black?

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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Quote Originally Posted by JBW View Post
    I wondered about the shading. Everything I read tells me that there should be one area of really black black?
    Not sure about "area" Brian? My limited reading on monochrome stuff talks about global contrast rather than areas per se.

    In other words, the engraving on your watch should be almost black in the valleys or cuts but the surface bits should be really bright (sometimes called local contrast).

    In Levels, this might be approached by moving the left slider up to the left part of the histogram and bringing the right slider down to right-hand part of the histogram (pardon the Global Contrast 101).

    Other editors e.g. RawTherapee let you play with detail contrast, see Contrast By Detail Levels here:

    http://rawpedia.rawtherapee.com/Cont..._Detail_Levels

    RawTherapee . . don't leave home without it . .
    Last edited by xpatUSA; 9th December 2017 at 10:16 AM.

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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Quote Originally Posted by xpatUSA View Post
    Not sure about "area" Brian? My limited reading on monochrome stuff talks about global contrast rather than areas per se.

    In other words, the engraving on your watch should be almost black in the valleys or cuts but the surface bits should be really bright (sometimes called local contrast).

    In Levels, this might be approached by moving the left slider up to the left part of the histogram and bringing the right slider down to right-hand part of the histogram (pardon the Global Contrast 101).

    Other editors e.g. RawTherapee let you play with detail contrast, see Contrast By Detail Levels here:

    http://rawpedia.rawtherapee.com/Cont..._Detail_Levels

    RawTherapee . . don't leave home without it . .
    I worked with RT for a while but I couldn't resist a software p;rogram built for my camera. Is this closer to what you are talking about?
    Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Brian Can I ask, is this watch silver, bronze, or what? I get no indication from the photo. If silver I would expect it to be brighter
    Roy

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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Quote Originally Posted by JBW View Post
    I worked with RT for a while but I couldn't resist a software p;rogram built for my camera. Is this closer to what you are talking about?
    Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch
    Getting there but you forgot to move the brightness slider:

    Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Notice where the gray slider is: most of the histogram is to left of it which explains why your brights came out gray. So I moved the white slider as shown; I moved the black slider up a bit; then played with the gray slider to taste. Then I added some micro-contrast:

    Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    As always, a bit OTT to make the point!

    I ignored the background which I assume you know how to fix with layers, masks and stuff.

    HTH,

  19. #19
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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    You can increase local contrast with any editing program that has unsharp mask. You don't need a dedicated adjustment, like clarity in lightroom. Just start with these settings and adjust to taste:
    amount: 20
    radius: 50 pixels
    threshold: 0

    I think what people mean by 'an area should be fully black' is just that often, one wants the tonal range to extend all the way to black. Your original already does.

    So it seems to me that there are three things to play with:

    --an overall brightening of the midtones. This is what Ted was showing; you have most of the image at the dark end, and if you just slide the midpoint of a levels tool to the left, it will gradually lighten it.
    --contrast: you could apply a fairly aggressive curve to add global contrast
    --you should use USM or another tool to add local contrast

    Here's a version with the two tonality adjustments, levels and curves:

    Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Here's the same thing, but with some local contrast added, using the settings above:

    Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

  20. #20
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    Re: Practicing the craft ~ B&W pocket watch

    Brian - a general rule in B&W photography is that the image must contain both a pure black and a pure white value (plus of course all of the shades of gray in between). At the time when publications were printed, this was a requirement from the printers and not meeting this rule meant having the image rejected for technical reasons. When you are restricted to 256 tonal values in a B&W JPEG, you generally need them all to get a strong image.

    The other point is that when you have that full tonal range, this will also increase image contrast without having to resort to other tools. That's effectively what Ted has demonstrated in his edit.

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