The patina of ageModerators: Greg B, Nnnnsic, Geoff, Glen, gstark, Moderators
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Please note that image critiquing is a matter of give and take: if you post images for critique, and you then expect to receive criticism, then it is also reasonable, fair and appropriate that, in return, you post your critique of the images of other members here as a matter of courtesy. So please do offer your critique of the images of others; your opinion is important, and will help everyone here enjoy their visit to far greater extent. Also please note that, unless you state something to the contrary, other members might attempt to repost your image with their own post processing applied. We see this as an acceptable form of critique, but should you prefer that others not modify your work, this is perfectly ok, and you should state this, either within your post, or within your signature. Images posted here should conform with the general forum guidelines. Image sizes should not exceed 950 pixels along the largest side (height or width) and typically no more than four images per post or thread. Please also ensure that you have a meaningful location included in your profile. Please refer to the FAQ for details of what "meaningful" is.
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The patina of ageI'm still working my way through the shots taken a few weeks back during an outing to Cockatoo Island with Matt K. Here are two for critique. More can be found HERE
The first two images here are a before and after version of the same shot which hopefully shows the feel I was going for with the image. Peter
Disclaimer: I know nothing about anything. *** smugmug galleries: http://www.stubbsy.smugmug.com ***
Re: The patina of ageMy first impression of the first image was hmmm....'uninteresting clump of metal' but after scrolling down to see the reworked one, wow, I am impressed, thats nice work to be able see the potential in such a scene.
Correct me if I am wrong here, but is that one very, very large chuck on a very, very large lathe? if so..that is a very very large bit of machinery! I am interested in the PP you used on it, if you care to share it of course, a bit of d-lighting, contrast and warmth...at a guess. gerry's photography journey
No amount of processing will fix bad composition - trust me i have tried.
Re: The patina of age
Everything on Cockatoo Island is big - it was where they built some bloody big ships
PP is a tough one - this is a rough recall of what I did. My steps were as follows: - Import to Lightroom. Some minor tweaks to fill light and brightness there - export to Photoshop for editing to do stuff not possible (yet) in LR - distort image to make the object less oval and more round - Nik Color Efex Remove Color Cast to adjust the WB (could have done this in LR) - apply Nik Color Efex Bleach Bypass filter (this is the key to the look) I used some pretty extreme settings of +90% for brightness, +95% saturation, -60% for global contrast and +90% for local contrast - used Nik Color Efex darken lighten centre to vignette the image (ligher centre, darker edges) could have done that in LR too - back to LR - bumped warmth and saturation - increased blacks slightly - use new LR2 brush to dodge the entire lower half of the disc - slight sharpen and export to web Below is a side by side before and after the bleach bypass. You can see how much it pushes the sharpness of the edges without blowing the whites like a straight contrast or curves adjustment would. Click for larger Peter
Disclaimer: I know nothing about anything. *** smugmug galleries: http://www.stubbsy.smugmug.com ***
Re: The patina of age
WOW - the bleach treatment and the distortion (or would you classify that as un-distortion ) really makes this image. Thanks for sharing the process, I appreciate your insight to see what made the final picture! gerry's photography journey
No amount of processing will fix bad composition - trust me i have tried.
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