Posts Tagged ‘ Post-Processing ’
The art form of photography gives us the ability to capture not only what we see, but what the photographer can interpret from the light and shape of any given scene. We all have different eyes and while two photographer may capture the same physical scene, the two resulting photographs could be polar opposites. It [ READ MORE ]
Dynamic range in photography describes the ratio between the maximum and minimum measurable light intensities (white and black, respectively). In the real world, one never encounters true white or black– only varying degrees of light source intensity and subject reflectivity. Variances in the intensity in light is measured in f/stops. Typically, the average pair of eyes [ READ MORE ]
I often get asked if I use photoshop. The quick answer is yes. However, if you can’t compose, expose and capture the photograph correctly then no amount of processing is going to rescue the final image. Modern DSLR cameras while having ever-growing megapixels and changing autofocus systems, they still struggle to keep detail in the shadows and highlight of any given image. Processing helps polish [ READ MORE ]
After weeks of searching the aforementioned photographer's on-line galleries and websites I have found that I have a natural attraction to the medium format panoramas taken of Velvia slide film. So I set myself a goal of trying to replicate this look armed only with my Nikon D300, Manfrotto Tripod, and Lee Filters.... Mission impossible? Not quite![ READ MORE ]
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