twoeye wrote:
Another great set of minimal winter landscapes Helena!
Beautiful palette of bluish greys with dashes of red.
Particularly like the repeating patterns of horses, fence posts and houses in #3
Thank you! Love your photos from Tromsų too.
Btw. horses seem to really enjoy snow. Both times I walked by they chased each other, kicked in the air, jumped and two of them rolled around in it. Fun to watch.
Photo taken October 2, 2015 at 4:15 PM looking across Lake Placid from the Boat Launch, the Adirondack Mountains, Lake Placid, NY. Image taken with my tripod mounted A7r and my Minolta CLE MC 40mm f2 M-Rokkor lens, ISO 200, lens set to probably f8 for 1/250 second. Processed in LR6.
naturephoto1 wrote:
Image taken with my tripod mounted A7r and my Minolta CLE MC 40mm f2 M-Rokkor lens, ISO 200, lens set to probably f8 for 1/250 second. Processed in LR6.
Hi Rich,
do I see a color shift towards the edges or is the difference in color towards the edges caused by the processing?
do I see a color shift towards the edges or is the difference in color towards the edges caused by the processing?
Jannik
Hi Jannik,
I know. Checking the unadulterated out of the camera image in LR there is some color difference in the image along the edges and the corners. It became more evident as I changed the WB to Cloudy and dropped a Grad Filter in (which made the vignetting more prominent). Then I applied vignetting of 14 in LR6. Yes there is more color change than I would like. But, some of the images demonstrated more of the affect than others in the series that were shot as the water and waves were changing position. Perhaps I should have selected a different image, but this one had the best exposure from which to work.
arduluth wrote:
This is a Sony thread, and this is a Sony image, and it's labelled correctly. A lot of us (most of us in this thread?) use non-Sony lenses adapted to our Sony bodies.
Sorry, my mistake. Haven't seen the Olympus lenses adapted, and also didn't realize that is what was happening... my apologies.
Fred Miranda wrote:
Look great!
I prefer this instead of focus stacking because it's fast and effective. Zerene is awesome but sometimes overkill for only two images. Usually I just bring both images to Photoshop as layers and create a layer mask showing the sharper foreground from the smaller aperture capture. The best of this technique is that most of your image will be at the sweet spot of your lens.
Thanks for that pointer, Fred - I had a couple of other image pairs taken with F/8 and F/16, and taking them into Photoshop worked a treat once I'd figured the mechanics - I've not used that link before, but it makes the process very easy - John
Photo taken at 8:53 AM, October 20, 2015, near the Dark Hollow Falls parking lot alongside Skyline Drive, Shenandoah NP, Virginia. Image taken with my tripod mounted A7r and my Minolta CLE MC 40mm f2 M-Rokkor lens, ISO 400, lens set to probably f8 for 1/60 second. Processed in LR6,