Fallen flower.. L-plater trying new thingsModerators: Greg B, Nnnnsic, Geoff, Glen, gstark, Moderators
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Fallen flower.. L-plater trying new thingsHello all - nothing too exciting here, sorry, and I'm afraid this will be rather boring for you advanced sorts.
I ran this shot off quickly last night using my 50mm f/1.4 and thought I'd use it for a little project, and was humbly hoping someone clever could run a quick eye over what I've done and lend some critique on my photo and processes. A friend's shot of a flower with the background desaturated [via Picasa] looked like a fun thing to try, so I thought I'd work out how to achieve a similar look on my ancient Photoshop CS edition. I've no training to speak of so basically set it as an 'assignment' for myself and bumbled my way through. Because I'm still such a learner I hope you lot won't mind if I write up what I did so that I can learn from any tips if possible. My friend's shot is below; alongside is my original: ... First I touched contrast, upping by 20. Next I upped overall saturation by 10%. Then I used magic wand to select the flower head only. This took a number of selections variously using the 'add selection' and 'subtract selection' options whilst diddling tolerance, but I got there in the end with the entire flower selected and lastly smoothed edges of the selection. Once the selection was made I couldn't for the life of me find out how to exclude that region whilst I desaturated the rest. After trolling the menu's I found instead that I could save the selection, so did that and crossed fingers that it would mean what I hoped it would mean, hahaha! So selection saved I deselected it, and next desaturated the photo entirely. This was too harsh so I undid that and instead reduced saturation by 70%. Now I went to 'load selection' and hey presto, my flower head selection returned in full sparkly glory! I upped saturation of that selection by 70%, and that was it. Here's the finished pic - the shot itself was just a quickie, and I'd perhaps look at cropping a touch next, but comments on it and my process would be muchly appreciated: Have: Nikon D90.. Nikkor AF-S 18-200mm VRII, Nikkor AF-S 50mm f/1.4G, Nikkor 10.5mm f/2.8 Fisheye, Tokina AT-X 116 11-16mm f/2.8, Tokina AT-X M100 100mm f/2.8 Macro.. Manfrotto 732CY & 484RC2, SB-600, Think Tank gear..
Next: Nikkor AF 35mm f/1.8G, Sigma EM-140 DG Ring Flash..
Re: Fallen flower.. L-plater trying new thingsFor starting from scratch: not a bad effort!
The pink in the middle foreground is slightly distracting though. It being Photoshop there are between 3 and 30 ways of doing everything (I'm not kidding). My general approach would have been to:
Adjustment layers are very powerful tools! Save the layered image as a PSD file with all the layers intact (I think it's once you get to CS2 you can use Layered TIFFs for this). That way you can re-open the file and do more work on the layers later. When it's time to output something for print/web:
Anyway, there's one general approach to try!
Re: Fallen flower.. L-plater trying new thingsWith Photshop, there are usually many ways to achieve the result you want.
What you did worked for you, so that is a workable solution. Another way is to use layers. I think that feature is in CS.(I have CS2) Make your selection, then from the layers menu, "Create Adjustment layer from Selection" Choose the adjustment you want, then click OK. Now reselect, then invert the selection. This will now select everything else. Now create another adjustment layer from selection. Choose the adjustment you want for this layer Using layers gives you the ability to go back and tweak things if you decide it needs to be slightly different. You can also turn the layer off and on, thereby being able to compare effects quickly and easily. You can also delete the layer allowing you to throw away an adjustment without having to redo an other things you may have done in the meantime. HTH Greg
It's easy to be good... when there is nothing else to do
Re: Fallen flower.. L-plater trying new things with Dave and Greg.
For your selection, you could have used the pen tool or used colour range as an alternative. Also I suggest cropping this image to a better composition
Re: Fallen flower.. L-plater trying new things
as another party trick, try blurring that background as well, although I think you have done a very nice job as it is. I do not use PS very much, however I had a little play with the crop, contrast and guassian blur (in capture NX) - its over the top but I think teh crop definitely works... let me know if you want it removed... gerry's photography journey
No amount of processing will fix bad composition - trust me i have tried.
Re: Fallen flower.. L-plater trying new thingsNice one Gerry although I would keep the blur as it is with his 1.4.
This would look nice on canvas 16:9 crop, flower placed around left (middle) rule of thirds....
Re: Fallen flower.. L-plater trying new thingsBigGerry, wow, hadn't seen that trick before! I'm going to have to have a play with that, I'm sure I'd still have the original selection saved.
I tried the Inverse trick today on a shot I took of the Powerhouse, just another very quick Photoshopping of an image, it was much quicker and easier so thanks again folks for the tips! Have: Nikon D90.. Nikkor AF-S 18-200mm VRII, Nikkor AF-S 50mm f/1.4G, Nikkor 10.5mm f/2.8 Fisheye, Tokina AT-X 116 11-16mm f/2.8, Tokina AT-X M100 100mm f/2.8 Macro.. Manfrotto 732CY & 484RC2, SB-600, Think Tank gear..
Next: Nikkor AF 35mm f/1.8G, Sigma EM-140 DG Ring Flash..
Re: Fallen flower.. L-plater trying new thingsnice shot!
you could even make a tight crop of the top half, create a nice triangle with the beam and its shadow. not a fan of selective colour, its just as nice of an image in complete B&W. enjoy the d90 and the video world opening up to you too!
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