It sometimes seems that as much happens after the image is captured as before.
http://www.boredpanda.com/how-photographers-photoshop-their-images-landscape-photography-peter-stewart/
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When we let politics trump science, people are needlessly put in harm's way. http://arstechnica.com/science/2017/01/self-censoring-fears...
nothing wrong with that ;) - its amazing how different things can be changed to change the emotion reaction of an image.
ReplyDeleteShane Menshik It's only wrong if the altered images are being used to "sell" places for vacation marketing, investing, and what not.
ReplyDeleteIt's more light room than phototshop
ReplyDeletePhotoshop?! Or just a polarising filter?! This isn't a good "example" image.
ReplyDeleteShannon Roy Please read the article. This particular image had filters applied and perspective fix applied, which structurally changed the image, and a stray power line removed.
ReplyDeleteI've had a lot of photos end up flat when loaded into Lightroom, and I boost contrast and color, to get back to what I saw with my eyes, but I try not to go this far..
ReplyDeleteCraig Froehle I read the article! :-) I didn't phrase what I wanted to say well at all. What I meant was: you could get a lot of what is represented as photoshop wizardry in that image by using a circular polariser on the front of your lens. Not to diminish that there are other tweaks, just no need to go quite so far for very similar results.
ReplyDeleteShannon Roy Ah, gotcha. Yes, a CP would help a lot in some ways.
ReplyDelete