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Tuesday, March 29, 2011

eBook - Guy Tal's Creative Landscape Photograph

I am currently reading Guy Tal's Creative Landscape Photography eBook. Guy Tal is a very talented landscape photographer and writer based in Colorado but ventures outward and explores the vast and scenic West. Check out his images. I'm sure you'll agree he has a very bold and sharp style in his wonderful collection of photographs.

About his new eBook then...

Guy's thoughts and techniques on landscape photography come across as being very intelligent, thoughtful, and driven. He presents some real structure and actual exercises to use that will "exercise your creative muscle", as he says. They are in fact very concrete and sound ideas that you can use immediately. The eBook is well designed with text and example images flowing nicely from page to page. It is in Adobe PDF format and 86 pages. I'm mainly reading it on my Nook Color so anyone with a similar tablet should have no problems.

I'm about half way through and overall its been a very good read and great value at only $9.95. I'm sure i'll have more to say once I've digested all the content but until then, if you are looking for ways to improve your creativity and landscape photography, pick up Guy's eBook.

Don't take my word for it, landscape and nature photographer's Darwin Wigget and Sam just published a review of their own on Guy's new eBook.

Monday, March 28, 2011

White Vignettes

I like vignettes. I almost always apply a little or a lot to my images. In CS5 and ACR, I use the Lens Correction feature but I almost always turn the vignette correction slider all the way to the left to turn it off. I generally use vignettes to darken down the edges of my images to draw attention and focus to the center. On one occasion, I used a white vignette instead with this photograph of a tree during a winter storm. There was snow on the ground and the snow was falling fast and the usage of a white vignette, instead of a black vignette, really helped to simplify the composition and reinforce the mood; a dreamy winterly scene.

So if you like vignettes as well, don't forget they can go the other way too!

tree in winter storm

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Borders, Revisited

I decided to again revisit borders with my images. When I just last spoke about borders and their impact on the success of a photograph, I was just beginning to experiment with them. I have quickly realized their benefits, even with images posted on the web, however, I wasn't completely satisfied with my initial tries at it.

I wanted this time to use borders and mimic their appearance of when a print is matted and framed. We all view so many photographs on the Internet now. When was the last time we walked into a gallery or spent the time, money, and effort to carefully print,matte, and frame an image? The end result is so much more inspiring and vivid compared to what I now think of as an unfinished product, that is what comes out of our camera and maybe goes through a few edits.

So here is the finished product, so to speak:


The double borders and white matte really isolate this image from its surroundings. Even when viewed on the web, don't you agree? I added a caption as well. For me, I like to have a bit of more information about any image that I see. Perhaps a name or a location. Something that helps me to associate the photograph or helps to tell the story of the image. I was undecided on whether to add my name or my blog URL as well. Both seemed too much. So I settled on just my name. Feels odd to see my name like this but at the same time I feel proud to share images.

Again I used Photoshop and the same techniques as from before by simply adjusting the canvas size. This time to get the multiple borders I did it in stages. First the inner black border by increasing the width and height of the canvas size by 20 pixels and setting the canvas extension color to black. Then I added one inch to the width and one inch to the height of the canvas and this time setting the canvas extension color to white. Finally I added one more inch to the canvas height and used black for the canvas extension color but this time I set the anchor to top center so that only the bottom end of the canvas received the one inch extension.

Setting the Anchor point


When I took the original photograph, I was enamored with the location and subject. The circular pool of water set the stage for the small and whispy-like waterfall that cascaded over brightly-toned weathered rocks that were cut into various slabs and layers. A beautiful pine angled overhead and would stand out against the clear blue skies of the afternoon. I had high hopes for the photographs that I took here. I used several 3-stop ND filters to be able to drag the shutter long enough to blur the water. I also used a 1-stop hard ND grad to tone down the bright sky. Even with this setup, the rock wall was still mostly in shadow so some fill light adjustment was necessary in ACR to bring them out.

I'm not fully satisfied with the final composition and overall tones in the photo though. I used my new Sigma DG 105mm polarizer on my Lee filter kit. The obvious dark band in the sky is seen because of the polarizer and shooting in a direction that would combine polarized and non-polarized sky. The sun was to the left of me at roughly 10 o'clock. I'm not sure if I needed the polarizer at this point. We were in bright afternoon light and I was hoping it would tone down on the reflections off the rocks and the water. Because of all this, I decided to convert the image to black and white.

There is also a lot of dead-space in the upper left part of the frame. If I had moved right, the pine tree would be covered by the rock ledge. If I had moved left there would be more tree and bracken to contend with above the falls that would have just blended the two together. So I compromised and settled on a composition.

Here is the unfinished photograph before the final editing:

25mm f/16 4sec

In the end, by being creative with the framing and converting the image to b&w, I ended up with an image that I now enjoy.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

TiltShift Generator

I've always been intrigued on the novelty of using a tilt-shift lens to create a miniature-look for a photograph. That would not be the sole reason for me to try to justify purchasing an expensive tilt-shift lens such as the Nikon PC-E 24mm. I'd like to add this lens to my collection because of its ability to control depth-of-field for landscape images without being constrained to using small apertures. I'd also like to explore a technique from Darwin Wiggett where he uses shift to then stack two images together to create larger images for expansive panoramics by stacking two images horizontally or by creating a square-like crop with two images stacked vertically. Check out this his blog and this page for more information about this technique.

In the mean time, I found this nifty little application from Art & Mobile that allows you to take any image and put the miniature-look on it. Find it here.

I used the Adobe AIR version of their application. Here are the before and after images:

before

after
I'm seriously lacking any more images right now to play around with this fun little tool I'll have to get out and keep this in mind when shooting or when I have my camera handy. That is, until I get the real tilt-shift lens and then I get serious, lol.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Borders

I've never spent any time, up until now, thinking about borders. Even when I've had a few of my photographs printed and framed, again, I haven't thought much about borders. I've considered the frame or the matte, which is a kind of border. However, I never considered actually applying a border to the image itself.

On the web, and even when printing your final image, a border can be very important. It can help with conveying the message of your photograph. With a border, you may be saying, here is where the image begins and ends. Other borders may help accentuate a specific feeling or mood.

So I've worked on a new image of mine and this time I created a border that I felt helped to reinforce the dream-like mood.



I created this border in Photoshop by selecting the perimeter of the image and then while in quick mask mode I used a splatter brush to draw the edges of the border. Next I added some Gaussian Blur to soften the brush strokes and edges. Then, I simply filled this area with white. I refined the overall thickness of the border by re-adjusting the canvas size of the image. This framed the image in a broken and hazy-like border that to me matched the dream-like feeling of the photograph.

Here's the same image without any border.



Which do you prefer?

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Tone Curves

I've always been either afraid and reluctant to understand tone curves in Photoshop for years. I knew that great power came from it but I assumed that great knowledge was needed in order to make use of it properly. Over the past year after going on a couple of photography workshops, I began to learn some real uses of curves. I began using curves and layers in Photoshop during my post-processing workflow to apply things like gradient filters, vignettes, and other localized exposure adjustments (i.e. dodging and burning). I also experimented with applying basic s-curves for contrast and sometimes used the default options for medium and light contrast. I would also use these in conjunction with the other plethora of sliders in Adobe Camera Raw. I never really understood the relationship between the other adjustment sliders and the tone curve. That is until now.

I came across the website and blog of Michael Frye (www.michaelfrye.com), an outstanding landscape photographer. I purchased his Land and Light eBook. In it he unraveled the mystery of tone curves and making adjustments in Lightroom (or Adobe Camera Raw and Photoshop)! I now have a greater understanding of (1) how to use the tone curve and (2) how it can do just about everything that all those other little sliders in ACR or Lightroom do instead.

Michael Frye's basic workflow for landscape digital photography is explained in his eBook so I gave it a go last night. I found it actually very easy and very powerful to use. It also felt more "correct" to make adjustments using the tone curve rather than making small adjustments with a dozen other sliders. In one simple tool, I can make my overall tonal adjustments for an image.

Now I start ACR with the sliders all set to 0, set my white balance, camera profile (ACR 4.6), crop and do any spot removal. Things look rather dull and gray, but this is really like seeing things straight out of camera. I'll get a chance to make the tonal adjustments afterwards...

Next comes working with a point curve for my tonal adjustments. By setting the black and white points and then adjusting the curve to add contrast and brighten the image, I feel that I get a finer level of control with far fewer "moving of various sliders" than I would have in the past. Now this image has some pop and contrast and the colors are already deeply saturated. Look at the histogram now...


I'll add a few tweaks in Photoshop next. First some more vignette because I love vignette. I'll do some simple dodging for the mountain and the tree to highlight them more. Then I'll add a simple border to frame things. This is the final result...



Compare it to how I first edited this image a couple of weeks ago. This first edit is rather flat and the tones are pushed more so the colors are little uneasy. Not what it actually looked like when I took the photograph...

 

While I do like my first edit of this image, after trying out this new technique, I think I'll have more creative control over my images and that will lead to some better final works. For me, I feel that I've done more with less, so to speak. The two images aren't drastically different but when your workflow becomes more intuitive, the final results are more satisfying. Whenever I end up doing less to an image, I'm more pleased with it. What do you think?