|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|
|
Mildly bemused
|
Four color shots
1.
![]() 2. ![]() 3. ![]() 4. ![]() Thanks for looking. C&C always welcome. |
|
|
|
|
#2
|
|
|
B+R=M,B+G=C,R+G=Y
|
Love #s 1 & 3, R!
![]() Both very satisfying compositions and interplay of color. Strong narrative (I could easily come up with an opera plot![]() ![]() !!!). I wouldn't want to take anything away from these very nice photos, please forgive these suggestions (for those two pics) - a tiny bit of tonal contrast on each (perhaps with the levels default values at black point 10 and white point 245), a tinier bit of sharpening, and run NR on #3.Neil
__________________
"Snow. Ice. Slow!" "Half-winter. Half-moon. Half-asleep!" http://www.behance.net/brosepix Last edited by NeilL; Dec-06-2009 at 08:50 AM. |
|
|
|
|
#3
|
|
|
Major grins
|
Hi Richard,
I like these shots, particularly the first one.... the colors are fantastic. They have pleasing compositions as well. GO COLOR!!! Take care, Tom |
|
|
|
|
#4
|
|
|
Polysemaniac!
|
ooh-la-la! When color is worth it!
![]() Don
__________________
Don Ricklin - Gear: Pentax K-7 'I was older then, I'm younger than that now' .... My Blog | Q+ | Moderator, Lightroom Forums | My Amateur Smugmug Stuff | My Blurb book Rust and Whimsy. More Rust |
|
|
|
|
#5
|
|
|
Major grins
|
Wonderful set.
My first thought in #1 was that these men must have painted the orange on the door. Then I chuckled when I saw #2, because they obviously painted the blue and green... Guy is framed in #3, but otherwise I could not figure what was going on. The purples in #4 caught my eye right away. Took a second glance to notice that her glasses matched as well. Thanks for demonstrating how color can be a compositional element in photography. |
|
|
|
|
#6
|
||
|
Mildly bemused
|
Quote:
Don't be shy about offering PP suggestions! I can use all the help I can get. You're absolutely right about noise reduction in #3, and I'll play with the rest tomorrow. |
|
|
|
||
|
#7
|
|
|
Mildly bemused
|
Rainbow, Tom and Don: glad you liked them. Thanks.
|
|
|
|
|
#8
|
||
|
Mildly bemused
|
Quote:
1a ![]() 3a ![]() Cheers, |
|
|
|
||
|
#9
|
|
|
B+R=M,B+G=C,R+G=Y
|
These are improved, R, I think. They have some punch now. I'm not sure of your PP methods and resources, so it's a little difficult to advise you. However, if you want to cut the effect in #1a I would blend the original with it using the opacity slider. Either way, I would remove the color cast - it has an orange cast (and there is also strong orange color in some parts of the image). I would do it by using either, or both, the White Neutralizer and Remove Colorcast tools in Nik's Color Efex. You might find that removing the color cast softens the effect in #1a that you have now, so it might actually be better to do that first, and then blend with the original if you still think it is too much (you would of course have to remove the color cast of the original too, first). After that, I think I would try to get some variation into the luminance level, which is now pretty uniform across the whole image, and consequently a little tiresome on the eye. I would try to do that by using Reflector Effects, again in Nik Color Efex, with the aim of giving the left side of the image greater luminance than the right, but without increasing the overall level of luminance of the image.
#3a, I would lift the overall exposure of this using onOne Digital Fill Flash, cutting back the strength to little above zero. Then, I would use the saturation brush and lift the colors in the painting on the flat they are handling just a very small amount. Next, using a big soft brush, I would very conservatively burn the bottom left of the image under a diagonal from the chain post to the red Vespa, and also the opposite top right corner, but without touching the truck roof. (Some of the methods of B&W can be used with color to mold the luminance of an image to good effect.) Unless the brown jacket of the motorcyclist is speckled, there is still visible noise there. I would use the NR brush in Nik's Dfine to clean just that area. I like how the water on the pavement top left, and the beer barrels, have more sheen and luminance in this version. That's what I would do, but you're not me! ![]() ![]() Neil
__________________
"Snow. Ice. Slow!" "Half-winter. Half-moon. Half-asleep!" http://www.behance.net/brosepix |
|
|
|
|
#10
|
|
|
Grinnin'
|
I'm a little surprised people are so enthusiastic about #1. The colors are nice, but compositionally I don't see a lot in it, and the guy on the left sort of blurs into the window behind him due to similarity of colors. The guys in orange make a nice contrast to all the blue, though. This picture just gives me a feeling of "almost but not quite."
#3 is kind of cool because of the confusion created by the black guy and the hole in the thing they're moving, but it seems like it could benefit from tighter cropping, especially to lose the dead space on the left. Meanwhile, the one I really like isn't getting a lot of love here... #2! The composition here is really nice, with the various diagonals, verticals, and almost-horizontals. The words on the wall near the top and the presence of the men complete the picture very nicely. It kind of reminds me of an Edward Weston picture of cross-cutting roof-lines, though the geometry of that one was more complex and there were no people in it. |
|
|
|
|
#11
|
||
|
B+R=M,B+G=C,R+G=Y
|
Quote:
Re #3, I agree that a tight crop removing a lot of the left side would be very effective, but I doubt there is the luxury of enough resolution to support such a crop. Neil
__________________
"Snow. Ice. Slow!" "Half-winter. Half-moon. Half-asleep!" http://www.behance.net/brosepix |
|
|
|
||
|
#12
|
|||
|
Grinnin'
|
Quote:
Quote:
|
||
|
|
|||
|
#13
|
|
|
Thaumaturgist…
|
I like the use of colour in all of them; very well observed, and certainly caused me to look again.
I think #1 is the best by far; it made me think "…so what the hell is going on here?"; reminiscent of M. C. Escher (but in colour!) Nice job! - Wil
__________________
"…………………" - Marcel Marceau |
|
|
|
|
#14
|
||
|
B+R=M,B+G=C,R+G=Y
|
Quote:
Categories can be used without them being prescriptive. I didn't say #2 was worthless, in fact I found good in it, similarly to you. However, my point was that if it had been more geometric, or more minimalist, or had it contained more street/doco-worthy action, it would have been a better image. Neil
__________________
"Snow. Ice. Slow!" "Half-winter. Half-moon. Half-asleep!" http://www.behance.net/brosepix |
|
|
|
||
|
#15
|
||
|
Mildly bemused
|
Quote:
Music to my ears, Craig. I liked the composition of #2 but didn't expect to blow anyone's socks off with it. Neil: The color in #1 was a PITA from the start because the red channel was badly blown in the orange worker jumpsuits. I tried to compensate by reducing the saturation of the reds in ACR and then doing some fine tuning is PS, but it still doesn't look very good at 100%. The version in my SM gallery does have an orange cast, but I thought I had adjusted it here. I'll have to look again. BTW, the only PP tools I have are CS3 and Noiseware. Regarding #3, the original is very noisy, as Neil observed, but it is uncropped here. The second version I posted has some NR but I think I would have to be less aggressive if I crop. I'll play around some more later today. I thought that it would be more surreal if I included more background, but you guys are right that the left could be cropped some without losing context. Thanks so much to all for commenting. |
|
|
|
||
|
#16
|
||
|
CaptureReality
|
Quote:
__________________
bd@bdcolenphoto.com Dgrin Artist In Residence -------------------------------------------- "He not busy being born is busy dying." Bob Dylan "The more ambiguous the photograph is, the better it is..." Leonard Freed |
|
|
|
||
|
#17
|
||
|
Mildly bemused
|
Quote:
|
|
|
|
||
| Tell The World! | |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|