View Full Version : critique please for novice
lynnma
Feb-10-2004, 04:31 PM
Hi,
Ive been out taking snow shots all afternoon... (what else is there?) There are a couple on "show us your best" and this one... I could really use some input if anyone has a mo.
Thanks
Lynn
GREAPER
Feb-10-2004, 05:36 PM
I have taken literally hndreds of boring pictures of trees with snow on them in the last few months.
This is much better than the VAST majority of them. I think your exposure is good. The snow in the shadows has a bit of a blue tint to it, (like most of mine) but i dont know how to get rid of it, or if the photo would be improved.
Sorry I am not much help.
pathfinder
Feb-10-2004, 06:55 PM
Hi,
Ive been out taking snow shots all afternoon... (what else is there?) There are a couple on "show us your best" and this one... I could really use some input if anyone has a mo.
Thanks
Lynn
What Image Editing Program are you using? I like the diagonal line the river makes from lower left to upper right - the slight blue cast in the snow might be corrected by selecting the snow with a selection tool of your choice and then using the Color Balance path to edit the Highlights and reduce the blue tone in them.
You might also be able to multiply the area of the reflection and blend it some to increase its tone and color saturation. Or you can increase saturation with the sponge tool also.
Do you need to include the little bit of sky at the top of the frame? Does it add anything to the image? Sometimes we are afraid to crop out the sky and yet it may not really be necesasary for the best image - just a few thoughts that occur to me. I think the picture has possibilities - Your exposure overall seems well chosen.
wxwax
Feb-11-2004, 01:07 AM
Lynn, that's a lovely shot. The composition is wonderful. The only thing I notice is that perhaps you missed the best light. My monitor is dark... but is the left bottom corner as dark as it seems? That's my only quibble. You're doing an excellent job of learning your new camera! :thumb
lynnma
Feb-11-2004, 10:35 AM
Lynn, that's a lovely shot. The composition is wonderful. The only thing I notice is that perhaps you missed the best light. My monitor is dark... but is the left bottom corner as dark as it seems? That's my only quibble. You're doing an excellent job of learning your new camera! :thumbThank you Sid... from you I'll take that...I've messed with it a bit.. is it any better? and would you crop it? I kinda liked the trees at the top, a small reflection of the trees in the water.. or the other way round. I'm struggling on staggering about in the woods alone snapping away... having fun. I messed with the other one too. Comments please. I need all the help I can get.
lynnma
Feb-11-2004, 10:36 AM
this was the other one....
tsiya
Feb-11-2004, 07:19 PM
this was the other one....I was getting overpowering white flash from the water surface that changed the aspect of the whole image. It just seemed to overwhelm the camera. The filter made a big change in my white egret shots, too. Got a couple of shots of the same subjects, same time, different PL filter rotation coming. Both from my Oly c2500L, with a 2X add on and full 3Xbuilt in zoom.
tsiya
Feb-11-2004, 07:23 PM
Full PL filter effect
fish
Feb-11-2004, 07:28 PM
Thank you Sid... from you I'll take that...I've messed with it a bit.. is it any better? and would you crop it? I kinda liked the trees at the top, a small reflection of the trees in the water.. or the other way round. I'm struggling on staggering about in the woods alone snapping away... having fun. I messed with the other one too. Comments please. I need all the help I can get. Lynn, please don't take any brightness/contrast suggestions from waxy until he gets a new monitor. The first shot had plenty of detail the the lower left corner.
fish
Feb-11-2004, 07:32 PM
Full PL filter effect
I think I like it with the glare better. More contrast. But that's just my preference.
wxwax
Feb-11-2004, 09:41 PM
Lynn, please don't take any brightness/contrast suggestions from waxy until he gets a new monitor. The first shot had plenty of detail the the lower left corner.
Hey MYOB. :thwak
wxwax
Feb-11-2004, 09:43 PM
Thank you Sid... from you I'll take that...I've messed with it a bit.. is it any better? and would you crop it? I kinda liked the trees at the top, a small reflection of the trees in the water.. or the other way round. I'm struggling on staggering about in the woods alone snapping away... having fun. I messed with the other one too. Comments please. I need all the help I can get.
Lyn,, that looks terrific. As I said before, my monitor's a little dark, but it looks great on mine! You're really starting to get some good shots. And we can commiserate together about the bad ones!
wxwax
Feb-11-2004, 09:44 PM
I was getting overpowering white flash from the water surface that changed the aspect of the whole image. It just seemed to overwhelm the camera. The filter made a big change in my white egret shots, too. Got a couple of shots of the same subjects, same time, different PL filter rotation coming. Both from my Oly c2500L, with a 2X add on and full 3Xbuilt in zoom.
tsiya, that's an excellent photo. I really like how it's framed and also the exposure. :thumb
fish
Feb-11-2004, 09:53 PM
Hey MYOB. :thwak
ESADMF :D
wxwax
Feb-11-2004, 10:18 PM
I have a feeling you're not allowed to spell that one out. :lol3
lynnma
Feb-12-2004, 06:23 AM
ESADMF :DFISH!!! I just figured that out!! an' I'm an ole' lady!!!
fish
Feb-12-2004, 07:14 AM
FISH!!! I just figured that out!! an' I'm an ole' lady!!!
:lol3
DoctorIt
Feb-12-2004, 09:49 AM
ESADMF :DFYFF is one thing, but man, EASDMF is pretty harsh. Good thing there was a smiley on the end of that. :wink
Oh, and do you have permission to use that acronym? maybe just a link next time...
Lynn, I like your shots. Snow is very tough, snow and water is tougher! So my usual question, where were those (roughly)? Quabbin again?
lynnma
Feb-12-2004, 12:11 PM
FYFF is one thing, but man, EASDMF is pretty harsh. Good thing there was a smiley on the end of that. :wink
Oh, and do you have permission to use that acronym? maybe just a link next time...
Lynn, I like your shots. Snow is very tough, snow and water is tougher! So my usual question, where were those (roughly)? Quabbin again?Hi Eric,
no they were around Tully Dam/Tully campground area. I think this is Tully brook. I was desperate to get some water shots and forgot Tully Dam would be frez.. this was not as you can see. I was about here: http://www.goldmedalconcours.com/Tully/Tully.htm
it's a very pretty spot. Must be lovely in summer. Thanks for the vote of confidence.. I appreciate it, I've always been a very lousy photographer, maybe theres hope...
DoctorIt
Feb-12-2004, 01:13 PM
Hi Eric,
no they were around Tully Dam/Tully campground area. I think this is Tully brook. I was desperate to get some water shots and forgot Tully Dam would be frez.. this was not as you can see. I was about here: http://www.goldmedalconcours.com/Tully/Tully.htm
it's a very pretty spot. Must be lovely in summer. Thanks for the vote of confidence.. I appreciate it, I've always been a very lousy photographer, maybe theres hope...Tully is an awesome swimming and hiking spot! in the warmer temp of course...
cletus
Feb-13-2004, 07:37 AM
I think you've got a couple great pictures there Lynn :thumb
What makes the first image work for me is the glare off the water in the top center of the picture. The glare helps to highlight the wonderful reflections in the water. I like the way the reflections are very sharp and veritcal. They contrast nicely with the softer edges of the snow and ice.
Very well done.
By the way, I'd love to get your thoughts on these (http://www.dgrin.com/showthread.php?t=479) shots I put up the other day.
-Eric
photobug
Feb-17-2004, 12:01 PM
... I think your exposure is good. The snow in the shadows has a bit of a blue tint to it, (like most of mine) but i dont know how to get rid of it, or if the photo would be improved.
I seem to recall reading about "blue snow" effects recently ... it's probably a white-balance
issue caused by the auto-white-balance setting on your camera choosing an
incorrect color temperature to balance against when it produced your JPEG
image. You can probably fix it somewhat in Photoshop/etc but, if you
originally recorded the photo in JPEG mode, you might lose a bit of picture
information/detail when/if it's re-color-balanced later.
If a shot is saved in your camera's RAW mode, you can correct the color balance
in the digital darkroom later without loss. ...This leaves you with the ultimate
amount of control later -- but the downside is that you have to
color-correct outside the camera every shot taken in RAW mode.
Well, that's my understanding -- anyone else is welcome to shoot holes in it.
Hi,
Ive been out taking snow shots all afternoon... (what else is there?) There are a couple on "show us your best" and this one... I could really use some input if anyone has a mo.
Thanks
Lynn
I like the first one. It gives me the impression of the day ending, the sun going down, and the temperature dropping.
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