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amyandmark3 Registered: Nov 03, 2007 Total Posts: 1941 Country: United States |
I'm pretty new to landscape photos, this is my 1st time shooting a waterfall. It is Anderson Falls (Indiana) taken w/ 5D and 24-105L. Unfortunately I missed the leaves before they fell a few weeks ago, bummer. |
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hugh Registered: Jan 09, 2002 Total Posts: 29225 Country: United States |
Hi Mark, looks to be an interesting place and worth another visit with kinder light to avoid the hot spots |
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jtangen Registered: Aug 06, 2009 Total Posts: 425 Country: United States |
Compositions are not too bad. Your shutter speed was too long though. You want to avoid getting those areas in the water which are totally white and blown out. Using a faster shutter speed helps. It's easy to change settings when you are in manual mode. What mode were you using? |
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amyandmark3 Registered: Nov 03, 2007 Total Posts: 1941 Country: United States |
Thanks for the comments. This was my 1st time to this location and it's severely backlit in the morning, so I had trouble with that. I was shooting in Av mode, should have went manual, just sorta forgot... I suppose because I'm used to bird/sports shooting where Av mode is all I needed. Still learning the landscape ropes, but I like it! I have a few more shots from here, I may post them after I catch up on processing. |
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rpope Registered: Oct 31, 2003 Total Posts: 3442 Country: United States |
I like both these compositions. Even though the light was a little harsh, you did a good job with these. |
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DonH Registered: Mar 23, 2003 Total Posts: 9615 Country: United States |
Welcome to the world of landscape. |
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amyandmark3 Registered: Nov 03, 2007 Total Posts: 1941 Country: United States |
Thanks Rich and Don. |
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bshamilton Registered: Aug 28, 2005 Total Posts: 33844 Country: United States |
Ah, the waterfalls on a sunny day conundrum. |
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amyandmark3 Registered: Nov 03, 2007 Total Posts: 1941 Country: United States |
Thanks Barry, here's to hoping for overcast skies! lol! |
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DonH Registered: Mar 23, 2003 Total Posts: 9615 Country: United States |
Mark, just try stacking all 3 exposures, each in their separate layer in PS. I would make your middle exposure the lowest (Background) layer. Now select all 3 layers and align them (Edit, Align Layers). I would then put a black layer mask on all but the bottom layer. Using a soft brush, paint in the shadows and blown highlights. You can use the opacity of the brush and of the layer to modify the effects. |
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mike reid Registered: Nov 26, 2006 Total Posts: 1583 Country: United States |
rpope wrote: |
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Dpic_arctic Registered: Nov 01, 2009 Total Posts: 2370 Country: United States |
The foreground is nicely exposed, but the water is seriously blown out. They have potential if you can fix the exposure, though, IMO. |
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amyandmark3 Registered: Nov 03, 2007 Total Posts: 1941 Country: United States |
Thanks again for the comments, and thanks Don for the tutorial. Unfortunately, I am on a new pc and don't have any editing software loaded except for DPP and NX2, so gotta make due until I get PS dl'd... |
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morris Registered: May 22, 2002 Total Posts: 17545 Country: United States |
Your compositions are real nice. Can you go back on a cloudy day or when the sun doses not strike the surface? |