Nicely done.... the only thing I see here that could be fixed is, her arm is a different color than her face. I understand that she may be wearing makeup that is a neutral warm, but I may be making too big of a deal about it?... just an observation. Like the background a lot, low key photos are my favorite.
Todd wrote:
Nicely done.... the only thing I see here that could be fixed is, her arm is a different color than her face. I understand that she may be wearing makeup that is a neutral warm, but I may be making too big of a deal about it?... just an observation. Like the background a lot, low key photos are my favorite.
T
It was a difference in light. there was a directional light reflecting off her face, albeit not the arm.
I noticed the same but didn't bother doing a better PP for FM (final edit will be fixed for client)
Also, as you may or may not see, this is a very humble player who probably doesn't even use makeup
It was a difference in light. there was a directional light reflecting off her face, albeit not the arm.
I noticed the same but didn't bother doing a better PP for FM (final edit will be fixed for client)
Also, as you may or may not see, this is a very humble player who probably doesn't even use makeup
Yeah I saw the no makeup face, which is fine. It's fine, Nice light, nice shot. So does this mean your 105mm is back?
Keiththom wrote:
What do you mean by " merged from 38 images?"
its a pano stitch picture. I put my camera on manual focus, WB and everything else once i had my settings dialed in, got up close and ten took 38 images of the subject and surrounding scene and then used Lightroom Merge to pano feature (photoshop also does this) then then edited the final image.
before I do anything i do a white balance edit, lens and profile correction on one image, then sync that to the rest of the images together then merge them. once merged in LR, you are left with a large DNG file that you can still edit WB in Raw format and everything else.
it lets you get a shallower depth of field but also a wider FOV but requires more work and patience and mental preplanning.
Elijah wrote:
What he did is called Brenizer method. Panoramic wide open shot.
Thanks Elijah. Something else I can research and learn!
I've been following this thread since it's beginning with the many amazing shots. Lot's of drooling. Four more days and I get my copy. Super excited to get to try one out for myself.