I tried a few things in Photoshop to create a kind of HDR effect with a single exposure, or a kind of Dragan effect in BW. There is a commercial plugin available (Topaz) resulting in a similar result.
What do you think ? shall I throw them away ? shall we forget this post as quickly as possible ? I am NOT on drugs or any other stuff :D
Shoot !
shot in India with the 18-200VR on the D40x, jpeg out of camera
#1 the original one
#2 color processing
#3 the same after a BW conversion
Guy
Overprocessed ?
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Overprocessed ?
Guy Van Hooveld
Nikon equipment, semi-pro photographer My website http://www.techniphoto.com My wiki http://www.techniphoto.com/wiki
Nikon equipment, semi-pro photographer My website http://www.techniphoto.com My wiki http://www.techniphoto.com/wiki
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Re: Overprocessed ?
Interesting.
I would use it only on a few places, like on the lemons (?) on her head and in her hands and erase the rest.
I would use it only on a few places, like on the lemons (?) on her head and in her hands and erase the rest.
Re: Overprocessed ?
I prefer the original personally, but think that the processed images do look interesting - did you use the brush tool in lightroom to do this? I've done similar a few times like here - like you, I'm not sure if it adds to the shot, but photography is art so I am sure that different people will like different types of post processing
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3041/258 ... a0cd_b.jpg
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3041/258 ... a0cd_b.jpg
Re: Overprocessed ?
I think this effect is rather subtle. I see it everywhere in images and I like it.
In this case I would use it on a copy of the original at 80% transparency.
But overall I like it very much.
In this case I would use it on a copy of the original at 80% transparency.
But overall I like it very much.
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Re: Overprocessed ?
My advice would be to do it on a separate layer, then erase the background because if that's also sharper and contrasty it looks artificial. I think that you would gain depth of the image when you erase the effect in the background and eventually in some parts of the figure on the foreground.
Regards,
Dirk
Regards,
Dirk