NikonGear'23

Images => People, Portraits, Street, PJ & Cityscapes => Topic started by: Tom Hook on November 02, 2016, 00:11:25

Title: Miranda
Post by: Tom Hook on November 02, 2016, 00:11:25
I have been married to this woman for 38 years and she is still as beautiful to me as the day I first met her on a winter day in 1978.

(Picture taken at home on October 31, 2016 as she was about to leave for a meeting in town with our first selectman)

Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: armando_m on November 02, 2016, 02:23:12
 Nice light and a very calm expression

A bit front focused
Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: Frank Fremerey on November 02, 2016, 02:28:47
Very soft rendering .. a beauty and very sincere person you pictured there!
Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: Hugh_3170 on November 02, 2016, 02:36:26
Nice image Tom.  As Armando says, a very calm expression;  I wonder what she is looking at and thinking.

P.S. And as a special bonus - she is even named after a camera!  (Nah, just teasing!  ;D)
Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: Akira on November 02, 2016, 02:49:06
She looks like a lady of resolution.
Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: Tom Hook on November 02, 2016, 04:11:09
Thanks everyone for commenting.

I think you may be right Armando about the front focussing but the unintentional mistake just softens her face which I think is what my wife prefers!

Hugh, Miranda wasn't named after the camera (that's funny btw) but got her name because she was born premature weighing less than two pounds. Her parent chose the name Miranda from the Latin for "wonderful" because she was no larger than a stick of butter (in the words of her father) but still perfectly formed. The name still fits for many other reasons.
Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: Mike G on November 02, 2016, 08:28:00
A beautiful portrait Tom!

What is a "Selectman" if you don't mind telling?
Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: Frank Fremerey on November 02, 2016, 10:20:28
You might want to duplicate the green channel to a layer and add it using "luminosity"...
Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: Tom Hook on November 02, 2016, 16:10:10
Thanks Mike. A selectman is a title used in various small New England townships and when they are a First Selectman, they are essentially mayors It's a term that goes back to the early pre-revolutionary times.

And thank you Frank. I am not technically adept when it comes to post processing but will give it a try. That would be in Photoshop? I should add that Miranda has very pale skin as she shuns the sun so luminosity might not fit the subject. As an aside, I want to learn another program besides Capture NX 2 as I have made the plunge and bought a newer camera than doesn't work with Capture NX2.
Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: Erik Lund on November 02, 2016, 16:13:22
A fine and very delicate rendering! Lovely
Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: Tom Hook on November 02, 2016, 16:32:49
Thanks Erik, I appreciate it.

Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: Mike G on November 02, 2016, 16:44:06
Thanks Tom
Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: Frank Fremerey on November 02, 2016, 20:27:01
And thank you Frank. I am not technically adept when it comes to post processing but will give it a try. That would be in Photoshop? I should add that Miranda has very pale skin as she shuns the sun so luminosity might not fit the subject. As an aside, I want to learn another program besides Capture NX 2 as I have made the plunge and bought a newer camera than doesn't work with Capture NX2.

The trick allows to sharpen eyes and hair without sharpening skin. It originates from the book: "Photoshop Professional" by Dan Margulis. I feel it is just the direction that could make the picture even better.
Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: Ron Scubadiver on November 03, 2016, 00:00:46
Nice rendering.  I always notice pale skin, probably because I have a year round suntan.  DAR, Daughters of the American Revolution, class.
Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: Erik Lund on November 03, 2016, 00:21:56
Thanks for the reference Ron.
Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: Tom Hook on November 03, 2016, 01:06:39
Thanks Frank for the information on the book. Post processing is hard for me, but I'll try.

Ron, appreciate your comments. Miranda joined DAR because of her interest in genealogy and American history. She was meeting with the town first selectman to have our town commemorate Native American History Month, another of her interests. DAR is actually a very egalitarian organization including members from every race religion and creed, including those sporting everything from blue to lace collars. A lot of different types of people in our country can trace back to soldiers who fought in that war, including both my wife and myself!

 
Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: Ron Scubadiver on November 03, 2016, 20:21:23

Ron, appreciate your comments. Miranda joined DAR because of her interest in genealogy and American history. She was meeting with the town first selectman to have our town commemorate Native American History Month, another of her interests. DAR is actually a very egalitarian organization including members from every race religion and creed, including those sporting everything from blue to lace collars. A lot of different types of people in our country can trace back to soldiers who fought in that war, including both my wife and myself!

I am a big fan of American history and Americana.  My connection with the US does not go back so far, though.
Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: golunvolo on November 10, 2016, 09:53:46
I have come back to this image various times and I can´t pinpoint yet why -sorry- i feel so connected to it. Of course is her, her expression, lighting, soft focus and color, simple and effective composition,  fitting the elements, your comment about how you feel about her and the way you put it in a image above all.
   Intimate and delicate.

   Thanks for sharing it.
Title: Re: Miranda
Post by: Tom Hook on November 11, 2016, 06:09:19
I have come back to this image various times and I can´t pinpoint yet why -sorry- i feel so connected to it. Of course is her, her expression, lighting, soft focus and color, simple and effective composition,  fitting the elements, your comment about how you feel about her and the way you put it in a image above all.
   Intimate and delicate.

   Thanks for sharing it.

Thank you for your thoughtful comments. I am pleased you took the time to express them.