Joseph Marney Offline Upload & Sell: On
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Samuli Vahonen wrote:
Even with explanation I don't get what was the point of your comparison.
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Saturation at least has nothing to do with this since B&W photos can be 3D-ish as well.
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While you modified the image you removed also microcontrast, sharpness and edge sharpness, not just contrast and saturation, which do contribute something as well...
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If I otherwise prefer different white balance, saturation, vignetting, selective sharpening to save bokeh smoothness etc. I can add the effects but it won't change the fact that in original i....
but the 3D-ish effect seen on few example images here, cannot be added in photo processing (I really wish it could)....Show more →
Thanks for your response. As a disclaimer, I may simply be wrong, and I accept that. I do enjoy this discussion though.
My first statement in this thread was "I think it comes down to subject contrast--sometimes DOF causes this, sometimes contrasting colors or shapes, lights and darks, lighting, perspective (large foreground/small background)....any of those things cause some subject isolation that makes it jump out to us."
Thus, some or all of these things. The black and white image can certainly exhibit 3D-ness through DOF, perspective, sharpness, etc. In other images, color may play a role in a 3D look while DOF does not. I'm simply saying that I think it comes down to contrast. - Contrast of light and dark, contrast of sharpness to smoothness, contrast of in-focus to out of focus, contrast of large in foreground to small in background, etc.
No, not all images can have that look. In fact, if you took that motorcycle image, and turned the bike so it was perpendicular to the camera and had the lighting been flatter, it would undoubtedly look less 3D, because the perspective and lighting played a large role in it's 3D-ness. In my comparison though, I could not change the perspective or lighting, so I changed what I could--sharpness, contrast and saturation. The result, I think, looks pretty close to OOC image from your run of the mill Canon or Nikon--soft-ish, lacking pop, etc.
So, in my theory, contrast, sharpness and saturation give the image it's 3D look (as well as the lighting and perspective), and while a Zeiss lens may be a tool to help achieve that look, it is just a means to an end. As is Photoshop, Lightroom, etc.
But then, I may be talking completely out of my arse. And I'm ok with that.
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