MTB'ing In Buffalo Creek CO
/forum/topic/830808/0

end

edemtbs
Registered: Oct 20, 2008
Total Posts: 190
Country: United States

Messing around and heavily edited in LR.

C&C are welcome of course.

Ed





This image is copyrighted by the owner







This image is copyrighted by the owner







This image is copyrighted by the owner







This image is copyrighted by the owner







This image is copyrighted by the owner







This image is copyrighted by the owner







This image is copyrighted by the owner




cre55107
Registered: Sep 08, 2008
Total Posts: 871
Country: United States

I think 3 works the best of all of them for the effect that you were going for. BUt the rest I would like if they were normal



Rick Denham
Registered: Nov 25, 2005
Total Posts: 2127
Country: Canada

loose the selective coloring. if you are going to use it, use it on one item, not one color. for example, in images #2&3, use it on the path only and lose it from the trees. the original idea of that style of photography was to isolate an object, not a color palette.



edemtbs
Registered: Oct 20, 2008
Total Posts: 190
Country: United States

cre55107 wrote:
I think 3 works the best of all of them for the effect that you were going for. BUt the rest I would like if they were normal

Thanks very much!

Yes, I was experimenting more than anything else.

Here are a some of the images processed in a more traditional way

#3 the one you liked. This is the next frame in the series and it's a tough call on which one works better for me.



This image is copyrighted by the owner







This image is copyrighted by the owner







This image is copyrighted by the owner







This image is copyrighted by the owner







This image is copyrighted by the owner







This image is copyrighted by the owner





Ed


edemtbs
Registered: Oct 20, 2008
Total Posts: 190
Country: United States

Rick Denham wrote:
loose the selective coloring. if you are going to use it, use it on one item, not one color. for example, in images #2&3, use it on the path only and lose it from the trees. the original idea of that style of photography was to isolate an object, not a color palette.

Ah. Good idea, I may try that. As I said in the previous reply I was experimenting more than anything else. Thanks very much for the critique!!


Cheers




This image is copyrighted by the owner





Ed


end