Re: Submission for the post processing challenge
[Re: Tommy Brison]
#10170
09/01/07 02:20 AM
09/01/07 02:20 AM
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Joined: Mar 2007
Arizona
daveman
Old hand
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Old hand
Joined: Mar 2007
Arizona
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Here is my go at it. I was hoping the flower would bloom - like Tony asked, but since it didn't I also whacked it out of there.
Last edited by daveman; 09/01/07 02:23 AM.
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Re: Submission for the post processing challenge
[Re: spartacusii]
#10173
09/03/07 01:15 AM
09/03/07 01:15 AM
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Joined: Sep 2005
Portland Oregon
RomanJohnston
Pooh-Bah
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Pooh-Bah
Joined: Sep 2005
Portland Oregon
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Ok....here is my edit....I didnt fight the noise much....its part of the picture...so I did some selective noise reduction in certian areas of the image. Then just put it through my normal workflow. Roman
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Re: Submission for the post processing challenge
[Re: RomanJohnston]
#10176
09/03/07 03:48 PM
09/03/07 03:48 PM
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Joined: Mar 2007
Arizona
daveman
Old hand
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Old hand
Joined: Mar 2007
Arizona
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I think it is good for us to look at our work and see what we would have done to improve. Looking at mine, I notice after comparing to the others that I ended up with too much magenta throughout. This is something I did not notice until others were posted, and something I do a lot... I need to get better at this. Usually I just sit on a shot for a few days after I think I am done, come back and look at it, and wonder what the heck I was thinking the first time... I am not sure how to tell if there is an overall cast to the shot- I guess just more practice but if anyone has suggestions...
For what it is worth, I will tell you what I did to bring out the clouds.
1. I used Thresholds to find the lightest portion of the sky, and set a Color Info marker there.
2. Using curves I set the end point for RG and B channels to be 245 for each color (RGB) at that point.
3. For each RGB channel I then found the point of the curve that corresponded to the blue in the sky, and made a very steep slope from the end of the curve to that point in the curve.
3. That made a strong definition between the clouds and the sky, but the rest of the shot was then strange. This is where it would have been great to have done the selection like Roman suggested, but I didn't think about that. Instead I created a sharp turn on each curve to try to even out the rest of the shot.
This might be a flawed workflow, but it is what I did. I would like to hear what others did.
Dave
Last edited by daveman; 09/03/07 03:55 PM.
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